An urban form response to disaster vulnerability: Improving tsunami evacuation in Iquique, Chile
Authored by Jorge Leon, Alan March
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1177/0265813515597229
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Abstract
As urbanization gathers pace and climate change increases the number and
magnitude of many natural hazards, cities are increasingly becoming hot
spots for disasters. Although the role of appropriate urban forms in
reducing disaster vulnerability has been recognized for some time, the
majority of its potential remains focused on long-term mitigation
efforts. In contrast, examination of the relationships with short-term
disaster management activities such as response and immediate recovery
has not been thoroughly conducted. This paper contributes to this
shortfall by analysing a critical type of rapid onset disaster, a
near-field tsunami, and the role of urban form in supporting the
populations' core response activities of evacuation and sheltering. The
Chilean city of Iquique (affected by a severe earthquake and minor
tsunami in 2014) is examined using a mixed methods approach that
provides the basis for proposed macro-scale and micro-scale changes in
its urban form; these modifications, in turn, are assessed with
geographic information system (GIS) and agent-based computer models. The
results show important existing evacuation vulnerability throughout
major areas of the city (as the result of interrelated critical
conditions), which nonetheless could be significantly reduced by the
changes proposed. Further steps in this iterative process, in turn, could lead to the development of evacuation-based urban design standards
capable of being transferred to different tsunami-prone contexts around
the world.
Tags
Indonesia
Design
Earthquake
Strategies
Cities
City