Rebuilding in Ranongga : reflecting on practice based research


Autoria(s): Slater, Hannah; Caldwell, Glenda Amayo
Contribuinte(s)

Ramirez-Lovering, Diego

Alexander, Jacqui

Fairley, Alison

Data(s)

2013

Resumo

Two hundred million people are displaced annually due to natural disasters with a further one billion living in inadequate conditions in urban areas. Architects have a responsibility to respond to this statistic as the effects of natural and social disasters become more visibly catastrophic when paired with population rise. The research discussed in this paper initially questions and considers how digital tools can be employed to enhance rebuilding processes, but still achieve sensitive, culturally appropriate and accepted built solutions. Secondly the paper reflects on the impact ‘real-world’ projects have on architectural education. Research aspirations encouraged an atypical ‘research by design’ methodology involving a focused case study in the recently devastated village Keigold, Ranongga, Solomon Islands. Through this qualitative approach specific place data and the accounts of those affected were documented through naturalistic and archival methods of observation and participation. Findings reveal a number of unanticipated results which would have been otherwise undetected if field research within the design and rebuilding process was not undertaken, reflecting the importance of place specific research in the design process. Ultimately, the study proves that it is critical for issues of disaster to be addressed on a local rather than global scale; decisions cannot be speculative, or solved at a distance, but require intensive collaborative work with communities to achieve optimum solutions. Architectural education and design studios would continue to benefit from focused community engagement and field research within the design process.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/65389/

Publicador

The Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/65389/1/RebuildingInRanonnga_AASA2013_HS.GC.pdf

http://www.artdes.monash.edu.au/docs/aasa2013-proceedings.pdf

Slater, Hannah & Caldwell, Glenda Amayo (2013) Rebuilding in Ranongga : reflecting on practice based research. In Ramirez-Lovering, Diego, Alexander, Jacqui, & Fairley, Alison (Eds.) Proceedings of the 7th International Conference of the Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia, The Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia, Melbourne, Australia, pp. 271-287.

Direitos

© 2013 The Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia

The papers in this book comprise the proceedings of the meeting mentioned on the cover and title page. They reflect the authors’ opinions and, in the interests of timely dissemination, are published as presented and without change. Their inclusion in this publication does not necessarily constitute endorsement by the editors or The Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia. No material, whether written or photographic, may be reproduced without the permission of the, authors, designers and The Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia. For more information go to http://www.artdes.monash.edu.au/aasa2013/#

Fonte

School of Design; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #120000 BUILT ENVIRONMENT AND DESIGN #120100 ARCHITECTURE #Architectural Education #Design Studio #Digital tools #Post-disaster reconstruction #Solomon Islands
Tipo

Conference Paper