Designing To Avoid Disaster

The Nature of Fracture-Critical Design

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Political Science, Politics, City Planning & Urban Development, Art & Architecture, Architecture, Social Science
Cover of the book Designing To Avoid Disaster by Thomas Fisher, Taylor and Francis
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Thomas Fisher ISBN: 9781136286131
Publisher: Taylor and Francis Publication: November 27, 2012
Imprint: Routledge Language: English
Author: Thomas Fisher
ISBN: 9781136286131
Publisher: Taylor and Francis
Publication: November 27, 2012
Imprint: Routledge
Language: English

Recent catastrophic events, such as the I-35W bridge collapse, New Orleans flooding, the BP oil spill, Port au Prince's destruction by earthquake, Fukushima nuclear plant's devastation by tsunami, the Wall Street investment bank failures, and the housing foreclosure epidemic and the collapse of housing prices, all stem from what author Thomas Fisher calls fracture-critical design. This is design in which structures and systems have so little redundancy and so much interconnectedness and misguided efficiency that they fail completely if any one part does not perform as intended. If we, as architects, planners, engineers, and citizens are to predict and prepare for the next disaster, we need to recognize this error in our thinking and to understand how design thinking provides us with a way to anticipate unintended failures and increase the resiliency of the world in which we live.

In Designing to Avoid Disaster, the author discusses the context and cultural assumptions that have led to a number of disasters worldwide, describing the nature of fracture-critical design and why it has become so prevalent. He traces the impact of fracture-critical thinking on everything from our economy and politics to our educational and infrastructure systems to the communities, buildings, and products we inhabit and use everyday. And he shows how the natural environment and human population itself have both begun to move on a path toward a fracture-critical collapse that we need to do everything possible to avoid. We designed our way to such disasters and we can design our way out of them, with a number of possible solutions that Fisher provides.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Recent catastrophic events, such as the I-35W bridge collapse, New Orleans flooding, the BP oil spill, Port au Prince's destruction by earthquake, Fukushima nuclear plant's devastation by tsunami, the Wall Street investment bank failures, and the housing foreclosure epidemic and the collapse of housing prices, all stem from what author Thomas Fisher calls fracture-critical design. This is design in which structures and systems have so little redundancy and so much interconnectedness and misguided efficiency that they fail completely if any one part does not perform as intended. If we, as architects, planners, engineers, and citizens are to predict and prepare for the next disaster, we need to recognize this error in our thinking and to understand how design thinking provides us with a way to anticipate unintended failures and increase the resiliency of the world in which we live.

In Designing to Avoid Disaster, the author discusses the context and cultural assumptions that have led to a number of disasters worldwide, describing the nature of fracture-critical design and why it has become so prevalent. He traces the impact of fracture-critical thinking on everything from our economy and politics to our educational and infrastructure systems to the communities, buildings, and products we inhabit and use everyday. And he shows how the natural environment and human population itself have both begun to move on a path toward a fracture-critical collapse that we need to do everything possible to avoid. We designed our way to such disasters and we can design our way out of them, with a number of possible solutions that Fisher provides.

More books from Taylor and Francis

Cover of the book A Clinician's Guide to Systemic Sex Therapy by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book The Ethnographic Imagination by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book Arab Education in Transition by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book Social and Emotional Adjustment and Family Relations in Ethnic Minority Families by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book Photographers and Research by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book MIT and the Rise of Entrepreneurial Science by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book The Rise and Fall of Mass Marketing (RLE Marketing) by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book The Irish Education Experiment by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book Learning to Teach Design and Technology in the Secondary School by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book The Writings of Henry Barrow, 1590-91 by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book History of Eastern Europe by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book The Environmental Tradition in English Literature by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book The Survival of a Counterculture by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book Sacred Worlds by Thomas Fisher
Cover of the book The Political Theory of Anarchism by Thomas Fisher
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy