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///flood.landscape.autopsy: Digital Post-Disaster Retrospection for Sustainable Design Decision Making
Author(s)
Date Issued
2022-07
Date Available
2025-02-28T12:01:05Z
Abstract
The moment after a natural disaster is a window of time that can be used to adapt-to-climate (change), but this opportunity is in many cases demonstrably wasted. The paper is devoted to the question of how can the collective amnesia that sets in shortly after natural disasters be prevented. After a disaster, amnesia leads people to forget about what primarily should be designed and built. For example, following a flood, it is not enough to understand and visualize relevant facts, such as the highest level of the flood and so forth. To avoid repeating mistakes that have been made before, elements of the drama and its symptoms like shock, helplessness, chaos, fear, etc., should be included in the retrospection of the catastrophic event. In order to avoid the unsustainable cycle of amnesia, we work on ways of pairing the hard facts of the natural environment with the emotional cognition of the affected human beings. These two layers are presented in the context of planning communication with experts, laypeople, and decision-makers. The aim is to avoid an unreasonable reconstruction reflex, and facilitate sustainable progress in the form of environmental and climate change adaptation. Digital instruments and approaches – some of them standard, some of them rather unorthodox – are considered suitable means of drawing nearer to such an ambitious goal.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wichmann Verlag
Journal
Journal of Digital Landscape Architecture
Volume
7
Issue
2022
Start Page
365
End Page
378
Copyright (Published Version)
2022 Wichmann Verlag
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISBN
978-3-87907-724-3
ISSN
2367-4253
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
537724036.pdf
Size
1.7 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
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