RE: Aftermath of Typhoon Odette: Reflection on Urbanity and Design Resiliency

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With typhoon Odette, it opened our mind to reevaluate our homes, city and its designs. We must have urban interventions that is ore resilient and adaptable to our emerging needs. We can play in improving the values of our local communities towards urbanism and resiliency. As we are rebuilding and resting from our unlucky fate, we shift our mindset and prep our homes to be able to survive even typhoon Odette runs wild once again (hopefully not).

Resilience design thinking allow us to break free from fragile design and necessitates a mental shift. We pay less time for the ideal scenarios and spend more time thinking about the extremes. In that way, we can address what we missed out before. We need resilience design thinking for our cities.

Designing for resilience is about changing our cultural mindset. When we shift our culture, it entails applying these concepts across the design disciplines and beyond, incorporating them into everything from structure to urban policies.

Dear @juecoree, I agree with your argument!
By the way, your claim will come true only if the politicians and businessmen in the Philippines can accept your claim.
Do you think the current political and economic situation in the Philippines can accommodate your argument?😳

The construction and design of cities has always been determined by political and economic issues.



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Do you think the current political and economic situation in the Philippines can accommodate your argument?

The current administration has a good infrastructure programs. Basing on that, I can say that our political and economic situation can fix our collective needs for resiliency.

The construction and design of cities has always been determined by political and economic issues

I agree. Urban design always dependent on politics and economics of the city that we live.

Enjoy a slice of !PIZZA

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