ABSTRACT

The demand is now urgent for architects to respond to the design and planning challenges of rebuilding cities and landscapes being destroyed by civil conflict, (un)natural disasters, political instability, and poverty. The number of people fleeing their homes and being displaced by such conflict now totals almost 100 million. Despite the massive human and physical costs of these crises, the number of architects, planners, and landscape architects equipped to work with disaster and development professionals in rebuilding in the aftermath of conflict, floods, fires, earthquakes, typhoons, and tsunamis remains chronically low. Design for Fragility expands the nascent, but rapidly growing field of humanitarian architecture by exploring 13 design responses to such conflict and displacement across 11 countries, including Australia, Bangladesh, Fiji, India, Iran, Pakistan, and the USA. Linked to this displacement is the systemic poverty that often lingers from previous colonial territories and eras, in which many of the featured projects in the book are located.

This book follows Charlesworth’s Humanitarian Architecture: 15 Stories of Architects Working After Disasters (Routledge 2014), which analysed the role for architects in exercising ‘spatial agency’ while designing shelter and settlement projects for communities after conflict and disaster. Since that time, the humanitarian architecture movement has expanded globally with the prominence of design agencies including the MASS Design Group and Architecture Sans Frontières (ASF) International. Design for Fragility analyses this role of spatial agency in architecture by addressing diverse conditions of fragility across 13 built projects – from refugee housing in Uganda and an orphanage for teenage girls in Iran to a residential centre in Northern Australia for people with acquired brain injury.

Each of the projects profiled in this book explore:

  •  The experiences and perceptions of fragility – or precarity – that provided a design challenge and directed the particular spatial response.
  •  The specific typology of the project, whether that be a housing, health, children’s, or a First Nations project.
  •  The personal values that influenced the architects to work on humanitarian/community projects and how consultation occurred with diverse and often contested project stakeholders.
  •  The experiences of the design team as well as project managers, occupants, and donors of the built project, exploring what they deemed successful about the project, and what, if any, were its limitations.

Beautifully designed with over 150 illustrations, this practical and inspiring book is for architects, landscape architects, design educators, humanitarian and development aid agencies that are involved, or seeking to be part, of future disaster mitigation and reconstruction strategies and projects, globally.

part One|41 pages

Design for Fragility + Children

chapter |8 pages

Design for Fragility + Children

chapter |4 pages

SOS Children's Village

Urko Sanchez Architects Tadjoura, Djibouti

chapter |4 pages

Habitat for Orphan Girls

ZAV Architects Khansar, Iran

chapter |5 pages

Bholu 16

The Anganwadi Project Ahmedabad, India

part Two|50 pages

Design for Fragility + Health

chapter |10 pages

Design for Fragility + Health

chapter |4 pages

Maternity Waiting Village

Mass Design Group Kasungu, Malawi

chapter |14 pages

Design for Fragility + Health

chapter |4 pages

Anandaloy Centre

Studio Anna Heringer Rudrapur, Bangladesh

chapter |5 pages

Synapse Supported Accommodation Innovation Facility

People Oriented Design Cairns, Australia

part Three|56 pages

Design for Fragility + Housing

chapter |4 pages

The Santa Project

Breathe, Australia

chapter |8 pages

Design for Fragility + Housing

chapter |4 pages

Green Shelter Project

Yasmeen Lari, Pakistan

chapter |8 pages

Design for Fragility + Housing

chapter |4 pages

The Pilot Shelter Program

UNHCR + CRS, Uganda

chapter |10 pages

Design for Fragility + Housing

chapter |5 pages

20K Project | Dave's House Alabama

Rural Studio, USA

part Four|47 pages

Design for Fragility + Justice

chapter |9 pages

Design for Fragility + Justice

chapter |4 pages

Gahinga Batwa Village Kisoro

Localworks, Uganda

chapter |4 pages

Bilya Koort Boodja Northam

Iredale Pedersen Hook, Australia

chapter |4 pages

Cakaudrove Women's Resource Centre Savusavu

Architects Without Frontiers, Fiji