Print Email Facebook Twitter Towards a more resilient built environment Part of: Knowledge Collaboration & Learning for Sustainable Innovation: 14th European Roundtable on Sustainable Consumption and Production (ERSCP) conference and the 6th Environmental Management for Sustainable Universities (EMSU) conference· list the conference papers Title Towards a more resilient built environment Author Meijer, S.A. Crul, M.R.M. Van Timmeren, A. Date 2010-10-26 Abstract Over time, humankinds lifestyle became increasingly dependent on finite resources. It follows that such a system is unable to sustain itself indefinitely. Several studies show that in the near future the climate may radically change and oil production will peak. Changes in the natural environment will possibly be so overwhelming that man has to radically change its response to environmental changes and thus its lifestyle. To cope with consequences of climate change the current efforts toward sustainability are likely not to suffice. An approach towards resilience is another way to deal with risks associated with climate change. Resilience is the capacity of a system to absorb disturbance and reorganize while undergoing change, so as to retain essentially the same function, structure, identity and feedbacks. A resilience approach offers a strategy to reduce dependence on finite sources. Thus, basing society on the resilience principle, by result society adheres to commonly accepted definitions of a sustainable society. The built environment can be regarded as the physical representation of society. Likewise the built environment influences society. Since society is not resilient enough, neither can be the built environment. It follows that when society becomes more resilient, this will affect the built environment in a positive way and vice versa. This paper outlines the theoretical framework for a resilience approach to the built environment, resulting in a more sustainable built environment than at present. This is done by discussing relevant literature and synthesizing concepts from the fields of ecology, sociology, sustainability and urban design. Subject resiliencebuilt environmentclimate change consequencesadaptive capacity To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:9d607386-1b79-451c-b034-486cc48d8f81 Part of collection Conference proceedings Document type conference paper Rights (c) 2010 Meijer, S.A.; Crul, M.R.M.; Van Timmeren, A. Files PDF 257_Meijer.pdf 262.93 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:9d607386-1b79-451c-b034-486cc48d8f81/datastream/OBJ/view