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ARCHITECTURE, SPACE, AND SOCIETY IN POST-DISASTER BUILT ENVIRONMENTS IN INDONESIA
01.01.2011 - 31.12.2013
Forschungsförderungsprojekt
The research project ASSIP will investigate the relations between architecture and society in the context of reconstruction programs after natural disas-ters. It will focus particularly on changes and interdependencies between the built environment - individual houses and settlements - and local socio-cultural factors. It will examine the influence of these socio-cultural factors on community participation in reconstruction programs and, ultimately, on the social acceptance and sustainability of these programs. The aim is to develop, on the basis of the research results, a database and software tools that will provide easy access to relevant background information about socio-cultural and architectural particularities in regions affected by a natural disaster. This will accelerate the transfer of knowledge and information especially useful in the rebuilding of homes and settlements, between people who need help, the helpers and researchers working in that area. Southeast Asia is one of the regions most vulnerable and strongly affected by natural disasters like earthquakes, tsuna-mis and volcanic eruptions. The proposed research will be conducted in two areas of Indonesia, the island of Nias (west of Sumatra) and the Special Region of Yogyakarta in Central Java, where between 2004 and 2006 a tsunami and earthquakes killed thousands of people and caused widespread damage to the built environment. Austrian organisations (e.g. Caritas, Red Cross) have been extensively involved in relief and reconstruction programs in the aftermath of these and other natural disasters, like the earthquake in Haiti earlier this year. What they have found is that the management and outcomes of these programs are strongly influenced by the specific historical, cultural and socio-economic conditions in the affected regions. According to the research we have conducted so far, aid organisations need, but often lack, fast and reliable access to relevant information about the areas and societies where relief and long-term reconstruction operations are carried out. Relief agencies are especially pressured by time-constraints and the need to quickly adapt their strategies of operation to local conditions and requirements in different parts of the world. Quick and easy access to substantial multilayered datasets can therefore be an enormous advantage in order to avoid lasting mistakes. Poor knowledge of the particular socio-cultural background or the cultural heritage of a region might result in low degrees of community participation in reconstruction processes. Community involvement and participation, however, strongly influence the long-term development and efficacy of relief and reconstruction programs, as ASSIP will aim to demonstrate with the Indonesian case studies. The proposed project will be based on intensive and long-term field research in Indonesia. A specially adapted GIS program will be used as a primary tool for research and documentation. The project will also draw on recent theoretical concepts and scholarly debates about the interrelations between society, architecture and development. The research will have a strong comparative dimension, which will aim to disclose local and cultural particularities and dynamic pro-cesses over time. Based on preliminary research results, new and rebuilt houses and settlements will be compared with previous and older villages in both selected regions. This will involve detailed and in-depth studies of the material, technical and socio-cultural conditions and resources, focusing in particular on the roles and motivations of local actors in shaping and transforming built environments. Apart from the creation of new knowledge in the disciplines involved, the project will generate data providing the basis for developing general recommendations and policies for achieving effective information transfer and cooperation between researchers, aid/development organisations and local populations.
Personen
Projektleiter_in
Erich Lehner
(E251)
Subprojektleiter_in
Ulrike Herbig
(E251)
Institut
E251 - Institute of History of Art, Building Archaeology and Restoration
Grant funds
FWF - Österr. Wissenschaftsfonds (National)
Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
Forschungsschwerpunkte
Beyond TUW-research focus: 65%
Development and Advancement of the Architectural Arts: 35%
Schlagwörter
Deutsch
Englisch
Erbebensicheres Bauen
Earthquake Resistant Architecture
Wiederaufbau
Reconstruction
GIS
GIS
Vernakuläres Bauen
Vernacular Architecture
Externe Partner_innen
Museum Pusaka Nias
Universität Wien
Publikationen
Publikationsliste