The Groningen ‘Accident’: NCG Atelier Regiobouwmeester: design for recovery

Journal Article (2024)
Author(s)

Enno Zuidema (External organisation)

Pasha Vredenbregt (External organisation)

Anna Herngreen (External organisation)

Quiryn Kaasschieter (External organisation)

Sophia Arbara (TU Delft - Architecture and the Built Environment)

Research Group
Environmental Technology and Design
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.59490/jdu.5.2024.8172 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Group
Environmental Technology and Design
Journal title
Journal of Delta Urbanism
Issue number
5
Article number
8172
Downloads counter
14
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Abstract

Between 1986 and 2013, the Province of Groningen in the Netherlands experienced approximately 1,000 minor earthquakes induced by decades of natural gas extraction. Until the major 2012 Huizinge earthquake, these tremors were neither widely acknowledged as a serious issue nor explicitly linked to extraction activities. Despite growing evidence, Dutch gas companies and governmental bodies delayed taking action, often prioritizing corporate interests over socio-environmental concerns. This essay examines the Groningen earthquakes as a socio-environmental "accident"—not as a random event but the outcome of sustained and systemic negligence which beyond physical damage, has led to long-term distrust, governance failures, and fractured communities. This study features the work of the National Coordinator Groningen (NCG) and it’s Regional Architect’s Atelier (Atelier Regiobouwmeester) to explore the recovery timeline, the role of design in rebuilding efforts, and how specific design measures (toolbox) can contribute to regional reconstruction and resilience. The Groningen case underscores the need for a more just and proactive approach to environmental governance and design in peripheral regions affected by resource extraction.