“…Road network disruptions—mechanisms that cause reductions in mobility or increases in the costs necessary to maintain the desired levels of mobility (Markolf et al., 2019)—are common on barrier islands during hurricanes, tropical storms, and nor'easters (Dolan & Lins, 2000; Hardin et al., 2012; Krynock et al., 2005; Nordstrom, 2004; Nordstrom & Jackson, 1995; Spanger‐Siegfried et al., 2014; Velasquez‐Montoya et al., 2021), and also occur as a result of king tides, sea‐level anomalies, groundwater flooding, or other factors that lead to nuisance or “sunny day” flooding (Fant et al., 2021; Hino et al., 2019; Housego et al., 2021; Jacobs et al., 2018; Moftakhari et al., 2018, 2015, 2017; Praharaj et al., 2021). Road disruptions can lead to major socio‐economic impacts, isolating neighborhoods, compromising evacuation, and preventing people from accessing critical services (Balomenos et al., 2019; Dong, Esmalian, et al., 2020; Jenelius & Mattson, 2012; Spanger‐Siegfried et al., 2014; Suarez et al., 2005). The maintenance and restoration of other critical systems—electricity, water supply, communications—often depends on a functioning road system (Chang, 2016; Johansen & Tien, 2018; Mattson & Jenelius, 2015; Nicholson & Du, 1997).…”