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Reconstruction after the 2004 tsunami: ecological and cultural considerations from case studies
Authors:Hye-jung Chang  Ryan Hargrove  Yi-xiang Long  Dennis J Osborne
Institution:(1) College of Design, North Carolina State University, Brooks Hall, Box 7701, Raleigh, NC 27695-7100, USA;(2) Department of Horticultural Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA
Abstract:Design professionals have not often been consulted regarding devastation after natural disasters. Most solutions and techniques of natural disaster-related recovery emphasize infrastructure engineering and food provision. Whereas recovery efforts and basic survival demand that food delivery and movement be facilitated in such areas, issues designers concern themselves with are seldom considered. Designersrsquo focus is on integration of ecological and cultural concerns in planning for disaster recovery. Indeed, after events such as the Southeast Asian tsunami of 2004, societies must start again with few material objects but with an extensive cultural consciousness. This paper addresses the role that designers play in such a situation. It is suggested how designers and other professionals can facilitate a series of best practices in disaster recovery. Overviews of large-scale disasters from three countries show how cultural and ecological considerations are the two elements most needed in disaster planning, both pre and post-event. Suggestions are made about how these elements may be best incorporated into future eco-culturally-based recovery efforts. Evaluation of design precedents used to renovate the natural and built environment is a positive and necessary framework for recovery.
Keywords:Reconstruction  Natural disaster  Tsunami  Flood  Hurricane  Earthquake
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