The impact of urban form on disaster resiliency A case study of Brisbane and Ipswich, Australia

被引:18
|
作者
Irajifar, Leila [1 ]
Sipe, Neil [2 ]
Alizadeh, Tooran [1 ]
机构
[1] Griffith Univ, Urban Res Program, Brisbane, Qld, Australia
[2] Univ Queensland, Sch Geog Planning & Environm Management, Brisbane, Qld, Australia
关键词
Built environment; Reconstruction; Density; Brisbane and Ipswich; Disaster resiliency; Urban form;
D O I
10.1108/IJDRBE-10-2014-0074
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Purpose - This paper examines the impact of urban form on disaster resiliency. The literature shows a complex relationship between urban form factors such as density and diversity and disaster recovery. The empirical analysis in this paper tests the impact of land use mix, population density, building type and diversity on the reconstruction progress in three, six and nine months after the 2010 flood in Brisbane and Ipswich as proxies of disaster resilience. Considerable debate exists on whether urban form factors are the causal incentive or are they mediating other non-urban form causal factors such as income level. In view of this, the effects of a series of established non-urban form factors such as income and tenure, already known as effective factors on disaster resilience, are controlled in the analysis. Design/methodology/approach - The structure of this paper is based on a two-phase research approach. In the first phase, for identification of hypothetical relationships between urban form and disaster resiliency, information was gathered from different sources on the basis of theory and past research findings. Then in phase two, a database was developed to test these hypothetical relationships, employing statistical techniques (including multivariate regression and correlation analysis) in which disaster recovery was compared among 76 suburbs of Brisbane and Ipswich with differing levels of population density and land use mix. Findings - The results indicate that population density is positively related to disaster resilience, even when controlling for contextual variables such as income level and home ownership. The association between population density and disaster reconstruction is non-linear. The progress of reconstruction to population density ratio increases from low, medium to high densities, while in very low and very high density areas the reconstruction progress does not show the same behavior, which suggests that medium-high density is the most resilient. Originality/value - The originality of this paper is in extracting hypothetical relationships between urban form and resiliency and testing them with real world data. The results confirmed the contribution of density to recovery process in this case study. This illustrates the importance of attention to disaster resiliency measures from the early stages of design and planning in development of resilient urban communities.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:259 / 275
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Impact of Airports on Landside Industrial Development: A Case Study of Brisbane Airport
    Ke, Meihong
    Baker, Douglas
    Collis, Christy
    LAND, 2023, 12 (07)
  • [42] Communicating One's Way to Employment: A Case Study of African Settlers in Brisbane, Australia
    Hebbani, Aparna
    Colic-Peisker, Val
    JOURNAL OF INTERCULTURAL STUDIES, 2012, 33 (05) : 529 - 547
  • [43] Impact of Urban Sprawl on Disaster Relief Spending: An Exploratory Study
    Lambert, Thomas E.
    Catchen, James
    Vogelgesang, Victoria
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ISSUES, 2015, 49 (03) : 835 - 864
  • [44] Urban Form and Sustainability: the Case Study of Rome
    Coppola, Pierluigi
    Papa, Enrica
    Angiello, Gennaro
    Carpentieri, Gerardo
    XI CONGRESO DE INGENIERIA DEL TRANSPORTE (CIT 2014), 2014, 160 : 557 - 566
  • [45] The Impact of Spatial Form of Urban Architecture on the Urban Thermal Environment: A Case Study of the Zhongshan District, Dalian, China
    Yang, Jun
    Su, Junru
    Xia, Jianhong
    Jin, Cui
    Li, Xueming
    Ge, Quansheng
    IEEE JOURNAL OF SELECTED TOPICS IN APPLIED EARTH OBSERVATIONS AND REMOTE SENSING, 2018, 11 (08) : 2709 - 2716
  • [46] Resiliency Assessment of Urban Rail Transit Networks: A Case Study of Shanghai Metro
    Li, Ming
    Wang, Hongwei
    Wang, Huashen
    2017 IEEE 20TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS (ITSC), 2017,
  • [47] Knowledge and Attitudes about Vitamin D and Impact on Sun Protection Practices among Urban Office Workers in Brisbane, Australia
    Vu, Lan H.
    van der Pols, Jolieke C.
    Whiteman, David C.
    Kimlin, Michael G.
    Neale, Rachel E.
    CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY BIOMARKERS & PREVENTION, 2010, 19 (07) : 1784 - 1789
  • [48] An approach for promoting urban and architectural potentials for supporting knowledge economy, case study: Brisbane
    Mostafa, Ayman Mohammed
    Mohamed, Khaled Youssef
    URBAN PLANNING AND ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (UPADSD), 2016, 216 : 20 - 29
  • [49] Do-it-yourself lifestyle movements in grassroots activist communities: A case study of Brisbane, Australia
    Papineau, Elise Imray
    Bennett, Andy
    JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY, 2024,
  • [50] Methods for assessing the credibility of volunteered geographic information in flood response: A case study in Brisbane, Australia
    Hung, Kuo-Chih
    Kalantari, Mohsen
    Rajabifard, Abbas
    APPLIED GEOGRAPHY, 2016, 68 : 37 - 47