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This text is part of the Weather Preparedness & Resilience Toolbox developed by the YOUROPE Event Safety (YES) Group within YOUROPE’s 3F project (Future-Fit Festivals). It is aimed at everyone involved in planning, building, and operating open-air events. It helps festivals and other outdoor events become truly weather-ready by offering both practical and research-based resources as well as background information on weather and climate. Learn how to design safer and more weather-resilient outdoor events.

Weather Toolbox – Weather Hazard Awareness – Precipitation

Weather Hazard Awareness: What are we dealing with?

Precipitation related Phenomena

Weather hazard awareness for precipitation-related phenomena means understanding how different types of rain, snow and ice form, how quickly they can intensify, and what they do to people, infrastructure and event operations. For crowd and event managers, the key questions are: how fast will conditions deteriorate, how long will they last, and what damage mechanisms (flood, overload, impact, ice, visibility) need to be controlled. ​

Precipitation is any water falling from the atmosphere as liquid, frozen or mixed forms, including rain, drizzle, snow, sleet, hail and freezing rain. These phenomena reduce visibility, change surface friction, create water accumulation and impose additional loads on temporary structures and utilities.

For crowd safety, precipitation hazards typically manifest through:

1 Rainfall: intensity and accumulation

Rain forms when moist air cools enough for water vapour to condense into liquid droplets that grow and fall under gravity. Light rain is usually linked to shallower cloud layers, whereas deeper clouds and stronger vertical motions produce moderate to heavy rain, typically described in mm per hour.

Heavy rainfall can occur within extensive frontal systems or within smaller convective cells, both of which are becoming more intense in many regions as extreme precipitation events increase. For event planning, intensity (mm/h) governs short‑term drainage and flash‑flood risk, while multi‑hour accumulation controls waterlogging, mud formation, and impacts on vehicle access and parking. ​

2 Persistent rain: saturation and stability

Long‑duration rain develops when synoptic weather patterns move slowly or become quasi‑stationary, such as slow‑moving low‑pressure systems or stationary fronts that repeatedly lift warm air over colder air masses. Under these conditions, soils and unpaved areas progressively saturate, turning into mud and compromising ground bearing capacity for vehicles, stages, grandstands and temporary roads. ​

For crowd management, persistent rain:

3 Convective downpours: short‑fuse flash flooding

Convective downpours arise from atmospheric instability, where warm, moist air near the surface rises rapidly to form cumulonimbus clouds capable of producing short, very intense rainfall bursts. These bursts can deliver large rain totals in minutes, often outpacing drainage capacity, and they may develop with limited lead time, especially in warm season conditions over urban areas.

The main hazard mechanism is pluvial (surface water) flooding of depressions, underpasses, access roads and event sites, particularly in complex urban environments. For events, this can:

4 Thunderstorms: multi‑hazard packages

Thunderstorms need three ingredients: moisture, atmospheric instability and a lifting mechanism such as surface heating, fronts or terrain (orography). Internally, they combine strong updrafts and downdrafts, producing heavy rain, lightning, hail and strong, often gusty, winds; organised storm systems such as squall lines or supercells can maintain these hazards over larger areas and longer durations. ​

From a crowd‑safety perspective thunderstorms are critical because:

5 Hail: impact and surface damage

Hailstones form in strong thunderstorm updrafts that repeatedly lift liquid droplets above the freezing level, where they accrete successive ice layers before falling when they become too heavy. Larger hail is typically associated with severe thunderstorms characterized by strong vertical motions and can reach several centimetres in diameter.wikipedia+2

The main hazard mechanisms for events include:

6 Snow and wet snow: load and mobility

Snow reaches the ground when the entire column of air from cloud base to surface stays below freezing, allowing ice crystals to aggregate into snowflakes. Wet snow occurs when temperatures are close to 0 °C and snowflakes partially melt yet remain cohesive, adhering strongly to surfaces. ​

For infrastructure, wet snow is especially hazardous because it imposes high mechanical loads on roofs, tent membranes, cable runs, trees and overhead lines.

7 Sleet and freezing rain: ice‑coating hazards

Sleet (ice pellets) is produced when snow partially melts while falling through a warm layer aloft and then refreezes in a sub‑freezing layer near the ground, reaching the surface as small frozen pellets. Freezing rain forms when precipitation falls through a warm layer, becomes liquid, and then encounters a shallow sub‑zero layer at the surface, freezing on contact to form a smooth glaze of ice on exposed objects. ​

Freezing rain is widely regarded as one of the most dangerous winter precipitation types because it turns roads, walkways and stairs into extremely slippery surfaces, and can cause power outages or falling branches due to ice accretion. For events, even thin ice coatings sharply reduce pedestrian friction, degrade evacuation performance and increase fall‑related injuries, while also overloading cables, trusses and trees that may be part of the site’s safety perimeter.

Key takeaways for crowd and event safety

Recognising the specific precipitation type and its formation environment helps anticipate the dominant hazard pathway: flood, impact, overload, ice or visibility reduction. Emerging research indicates that extreme convective rainfall and urban flash floods are increasing, intensifying the operational risks around large open‑air and urban events. ​

For a practical toolbox, precipitation awareness should be integrated into:

More Information

  1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precipitation_types
  2. https://www.weatherandradar.com/weather-news/understanding-the-different-types-of-winter-precipitation–d5f96f4a-065e-4ae0-b3e7-5cbd647e4439
  3. https://www.icao.int/sites/default/files/environmental-protection/Documents/Climate%20SYnthesis%20Factsheets%202024/4-Aviation-and-Precipitation.pdf
  4. https://ropewiki.com/Precipitation_Type
  5. https://weather.metoffice.gov.uk/learn-about/met-office-for-schools/other-content/other-resources/what-is-precipitation
  6. https://www.aopa.org/training-and-safety/online-learning/safety-spotlights/weather-wise-precipitation-and-icing/precipitation
  7. https://www.european-coatings-show.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/i4.14_gb_2025.pdf
  8. https://www.atlantis-press.com/article/125997925.pdf
  9. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1361920925002780
  10. https://abastran.com/en/key-standards-and-regulations-for-temporary-event-structures/
  11. https://nhess.copernicus.org/articles/21/2563/
  12. https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2024EF004505
  13. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19475705.2024.2302561
  14. https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/bitstream/JRC132615/JRC132615_01.pdf
  15. https://www.windenergyhamburg.com/fileadmin/general/pdf/technical-bulletins/en/hmc_technical_bulletin_open-space_en.pdf
  16. https://www.nature.com/articles/s44304-025-00158-4
  17. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S136655452500105X
  18. https://www.reichytent.com/safety-standards-and-regulations-for-structural-tents/