Site Meter

Gallery: ANNIVERSARY OF KATRINA: Desig...

 

Today marks the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, and to make sure that people don’t forget it about the massive devastation that affected so many people on the Gulf Coast, we are devoting this week to thinking about ways to improve home and landscape design so that something like this never happens again.

Despite the social and political factors involved in last years disaster, we can’t help but think that if the urban landscape and individual houses had been better designed, we never would have had such a massive problem in the first place. There are many design solutions to tackle the problems of hurricanes, flooding, and displacement, and we’ve spent the last year covering as many of them as we could: hurricane-resistant houses, flood-resistant houses, rebuilding competitions, and temporary shelter for people displaced by Hurrican Katrina. In case you missed any of it, here’s a recap:

Housing Solutions:

+ Katrina Cottages + Hurricane resistant domes + Flood-resistant housing

Design Competitions & Rebuilding Efforts:

+ Gulf Coast Model Home Program + Designing the Future of New Orleans + Newer Orleans Competition

Core 77 also has a great article called Surviving the Flood which focuses on water-proof design exhibited in the Rotterdam Biennial.

Please write in and give your thoughts if you have any ideas, opinions or suggestions about how to improve the current state of affairs in New Orleans, and how to prevent future disasters…

5 Responses to “ANNIVERSARY OF KATRINA: Designing for disaster”

  1. Andreas Paulsen Andreas Paulsen says:

    We can’t really do anything about the weather, but… A worldwide Design Competition for house design for the area and other area’s that are in the path of “bad weather”. New Orleans could be the Grand Show for this. The internet is the medium.
    I participated in the design competition for the “Ground Zero” Memorial, didn’t win, but I participated. How may would participate in the “Katrina Home Show” in New Orleans?? Ask the NYTimes and The International Harold Tribune for Space plus use this site to ad and expand the exposure. Why Not??
    Andreas

  2. patti patti says:

    Um. Why don’t they just build the city somewhere else?

  3. [...] 2. HURRICANE KATRINA’S AFTERMATH In the wake of such a large-scale and devastating natural disaster, we’ve seen designers respond to Hurricane Katrina through a variety of inspiring projects, initiatives, and competitions. From the New Urbanists’ $35,000 Katrina Cottage to a slew of design competitions including Global Green’s GreeNOLA initiative and Architectural Record’s Designing the Future of New Orleans competition, designers, architects, and non-profits have joined forces to produce some truly innovative and humanitarian projects. [...]

  4. [...] Its unfortunate that it takes a disaster like Hurricane Katrina to convince people of the efficiency of modular building. Nevertheless, that is what seems to be happening in the gulf coast right now – as no other form of traditional stick building seems to be up to the crucial task of quickly rebuilding devasted homes and helping victims get their lives back together. Of the thousands of homes damaged and destroyed by Hurricane Katrina, only a fraction have been replaced. [...]

  5. beth_hyde beth_hyde says:

    we are doing work on how the envioroment will

Leave a Comment

Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments.

Please note that gratuitous links to your site are viewed as spam and may result in removed comments.

Add your comments

NEW USER

CURRENT USERS LOGIN

Lost your password?

get the free Inhabitat newsletter

Submit this form
popular today
all time
most commented
more popular stories >
more popular stories >
more popular stories >
What are you looking for? (Solar, HVAC, etc.)
Where are you located?