Resilient Built Environment: New Framework for Assessing the Residential Construction Market
Publication: Journal of Architectural Engineering
Volume 21, Issue 4
Abstract
The residential construction market remains vulnerable to the environment. The architecture, engineering, and construction industry now recognizes natural hazards as an increasing threat to the vitality of the built environment. Resilience has become a central concept for assessing environment adaptations; however, how to assess resilience remains elusive. In an effort to solve this problem, the present work proposes a conceptual framework of resilient built environment (RBE), which focuses on one piece of the resilience puzzle: residential construction in the built environment. This paper also provides a case study to demonstrate how to use the RBE framework to assess the state-level minimum resilience performance for the U.S. residential construction market. Findings from the study indicate that 53% of states have adopted building codes with a satisfactory capability for resilience, which raises a need for new policies on resilience management. The case study validates the RBE framework as a valuable tool for describing and assessing resilience performance.
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Acknowledgments
The authors acknowledge the contributions of Hanley Wood, a residential and commercial design and construction industry media company, without whose help this paper would not have been possible.
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© 2015 American Society of Civil Engineers.
History
Received: Dec 8, 2014
Accepted: Mar 11, 2015
Published online: Jul 23, 2015
Published in print: Dec 1, 2015
Discussion open until: Dec 23, 2015
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