Bushfire sustainability : Strategies for reconciling bushfire and biodiversity with daily life


Autoria(s): Weir, Ian
Contribuinte(s)

Aland, Katherine

Anderson, Jessica

Bailey, Benjamin

Barra, Andrew

Benoit, Stanley

Blackburn, Samuel

Borsellino, Rosebella

Buckley, Matt

Chan, Ho Ching (Amos)

Cilento, Ranald

Canas, Teresa

Dong, Hanqi

Drake, Melissa

Edwards, Alex

Fajriandini, Fadilla

Gomez, Emily

Griffin, Wanda

Hall, Zillah

Hickling, Lauren

Hoang, Kim

Hodgson, Chris

Howarth, Scott

Jeavons, Tareq

Jia, Wenhao (Lance)

Keiser, Clint

King, Phoebe

Klaebe, Matilda

Kwan, Denis

Kyriacou, Andrew

Lapitan, Arabella

Lau, Tracy

Li, Hao-Yang

Lin, Ashley

Lu, Juen (Norman)

McCoombes, Shaun

Moore, Joel

Moriones, Luis

Muliadi, Rafaela

Ng, Man Ho

Nicholas, Sarah

Rabbidge, Laughlan

Randall, Dylan

Rothwell, Lincoln

Schubel, Thomas

Shute, Nathan

Stone, Kirtsy

Street, Paul

Tammer, Damien

Wang, Roger

Ward, Alexander

Webster, Steven

Witt, Hayley

Wong, Phil

Woodley, Brendan

Zigenbine, Jeremy

Data(s)

2010

Resumo

This exhibition and catalogue provides a visual record of student work exhibited at the Australian Institute of Architects offices in Brisbane from November 15 to 29, 2010. The exhibition features the final design outcomes of the inaugural Bushfire Sustainability unit conducted at QUT in semester two, 2010. The core objective of this unit was to develop our students’ skills in collaborative practice in design, research and presentation. The theme of ‘bushfire sustainability’ was chosen because living sustainably in bushfire prone landscapes presents a number of problems, the nature of which might only be resolved via multidisciplinary collaboration among the design disciplines. The students involved represent the disciplines of Interior Design, Landscape Architecture, Industrial Design, Architecture and Sustainability – all from within the School of Design at QUT. 55 students, mostly in their third year of study, worked in teams of five (one from each discipline) to design one of a number of homes in highly bushfire prone sites in either Western Australia or SE Queensland. This year level and the interdisciplinary mix are perhaps the best placed to resolve these problems: being unrestrained from the burdens of professional practice and technical overload they retain the potential for innovative, lateral thinking across the range of spatial scales and philosophical perspectives associated with inhabitation of bushfire prone landscapes. It is envisaged that, through the ‘vehicle’ of this design research, that the students’ work will contribute to understandings of how creative design disciplines might respond to this significant national problem, which hitherto has been attended to primarily by engineering and the sciences.

Formato

application/pdf

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40792/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40792/1/Bushfire_Catalogue_FINAL.pdf

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40792/2/2011006818_Weir%2C_Ian._Bushfire_Sustainability.pdf

Weir, Ian (2010) Bushfire sustainability : Strategies for reconciling bushfire and biodiversity with daily life. [Exhibition/Event]

Fonte

Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; School of Design

Palavras-Chave #120101 Architectural Design #120302 Design Innovation #Bushfire #Biodiversity #Sustainability #Architecture #Landscape
Tipo

Creative Work