The role of memory in disaster-prone places is essential to face disaster events, which, in time, can also shape city-making. Communities that live in disaster-prone places tend to react from instincts passed down through generations, rather than acting per protocols or planning by a centralised administrative organisation. This is evidenced not only in communal behaviours in the wake and aftermath of an event, but is also tangible in urban infrastructure, where its construction responds to a very local sense of belonging and attachment. Thus, I argue that communal knowledge construction in disaster-prone places relies on memory of a trans-generational origin, where memory is re-signified from event to event, empowering present communities ...