The Bouncing Back Project, which began after the Queensland flood event in January 2011, has organically grown through a number of reiterations as per the diagram above. In the August 2011 it resulted in the physical construction of an Emergency Shelter [designed by GreenLeaf Engineers] in Sydney at the Customs House in Circular Quay and a conference paper publication at the AASA conference. To date this research has progressed without any research grant funding and has resulted in significant media interest. During the construction of the Emergency Shelter we collected a wide range of multimedia data which is being compilled into a documentary focusing on the architecture students’ experience throughout the iterations of Bouncing Back
An environmental crisis in Australia in early 2009 prompted the architectural design work considered...
Purpose - To confront the increasingly devastating impacts of disasters and the challenges that clim...
In post-disaster reconstruction in underdeveloped countries, architects all too often create design ...
Architectural education is beginning to recognise the potential of a more intensive relationship bet...
The Bouncing Back research study, which began after the Queensland flooding in January 2011, has org...
After state-wide flooding and a category-5 tropical cyclone, three-quarters of the state of Queensla...
"Bouncing Back: Resilient Design for Brisbane" was an opportunity for QUT students to communicate th...
"Bouncing Back: Resilient Design for Brisbane" was an opportunity for QUT students to communicate th...
This paper focuses on the learning and teaching approach adopted in an undergraduate landscape archi...
The physical destruction accompanying disasters typically creates an urgency to rebuild and help sur...
This paper investigates the role of the architect in post-disaster reconstruction and questions thei...
Overview: In 2010 approximately 42 million people were forced to flee their homes due to natural dis...
Earthquakes and other major disasters present communities and their authorities with an extraordinar...
Two hundred million people are displaced annually due to natural disasters with a further one billio...
This project looks at how destroyed architecture, although physically lost, fundamentally continues ...
An environmental crisis in Australia in early 2009 prompted the architectural design work considered...
Purpose - To confront the increasingly devastating impacts of disasters and the challenges that clim...
In post-disaster reconstruction in underdeveloped countries, architects all too often create design ...
Architectural education is beginning to recognise the potential of a more intensive relationship bet...
The Bouncing Back research study, which began after the Queensland flooding in January 2011, has org...
After state-wide flooding and a category-5 tropical cyclone, three-quarters of the state of Queensla...
"Bouncing Back: Resilient Design for Brisbane" was an opportunity for QUT students to communicate th...
"Bouncing Back: Resilient Design for Brisbane" was an opportunity for QUT students to communicate th...
This paper focuses on the learning and teaching approach adopted in an undergraduate landscape archi...
The physical destruction accompanying disasters typically creates an urgency to rebuild and help sur...
This paper investigates the role of the architect in post-disaster reconstruction and questions thei...
Overview: In 2010 approximately 42 million people were forced to flee their homes due to natural dis...
Earthquakes and other major disasters present communities and their authorities with an extraordinar...
Two hundred million people are displaced annually due to natural disasters with a further one billio...
This project looks at how destroyed architecture, although physically lost, fundamentally continues ...
An environmental crisis in Australia in early 2009 prompted the architectural design work considered...
Purpose - To confront the increasingly devastating impacts of disasters and the challenges that clim...
In post-disaster reconstruction in underdeveloped countries, architects all too often create design ...