2021
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-71819-0_1
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Axiomatic Design in Regenerative Urban Climate Adaptation

Abstract: This chapter invokes the urban design community to provide transparency in design decision-making by discussing the role of design specifications and the production of evidence in enabling scrutiny and accountability of design proposals in relation to fulfilling sustainability goals and fighting climate change. It claims that original and verifiable regenerative design solutions emerge from clear design specifications supported by evidence, rather than normative sustainability alone. Evidence is understood as … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…They are not grounded on the complexities of design practice which is permeated by liabilities and structured to protect itself from these. Deployable models and frameworks need to provide actionable information such as numbers or workflows in order to be usable, enabling designers to risk assess their actions when deciding to 'jump out of the conventional' (Bleil de Souza et al 2023b).  Some studies also present 'holistic' solutions to the problem grounded on rarely used procurement processes such as 'Integrated Project Delivery'; a type of procurement based on deep and continuous interaction between various design professionals, with shared risks and liabilities.…”
Section: Problem Definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…They are not grounded on the complexities of design practice which is permeated by liabilities and structured to protect itself from these. Deployable models and frameworks need to provide actionable information such as numbers or workflows in order to be usable, enabling designers to risk assess their actions when deciding to 'jump out of the conventional' (Bleil de Souza et al 2023b).  Some studies also present 'holistic' solutions to the problem grounded on rarely used procurement processes such as 'Integrated Project Delivery'; a type of procurement based on deep and continuous interaction between various design professionals, with shared risks and liabilities.…”
Section: Problem Definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… Some studies also present 'holistic' solutions to the problem grounded on rarely used procurement processes such as 'Integrated Project Delivery'; a type of procurement based on deep and continuous interaction between various design professionals, with shared risks and liabilities. Similarly, calls in support of these 'holistic' solutions fail to provide methods to support their propositions, particularly in relation to information transfer and management, complicating how building performance information and design information are exchanged, hindering the creation of useful feedback loops between simulation and design (Amorocho 2023;Bleil de Souza et al 2023b).  Much of the literature makes rather sweeping and stereotyping statements about various building design professionals such as 'the architect', 'architectural practitioner' and 'engineer' (Attia et al 2012).…”
Section: Problem Definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%