Chapter 21
Community Based Environmental Design:
Empowering Local Expertise in Design
Charrettes
Rob Roggema, Lisa Vos and John Martin
Planning for climate change adaptation aims to increase adaptive capacity and
resilience in communities, but current spatial planning and design projects often
neglect the creative power and expertise available in the communities they osten-
sibly serve. This results in communities that are poorly prepared for the future, and
especially the uncertainty of future climate change impacts. This is partly caused by
historically determined design processes that leave little room for an enhanced role
for community in designing, and deciding, their own future. The design charrette
approach is an intensive design-based way to empower local knowledge. In the
design charrette process community members and local experts are mixed with
academics, designers and regional policy makers. As a group they design and
model a desired future for their community, which can as a result reach a higher
adaptive capacity that is inherently more resilient and better capable of dealing with
unforeseeable climate impacts. The impact of the charrette is twofold. Firstly, the
normal social constellations change as community members, with different inter-
ests, are connected through new tools for collaboration and exchange. Secondly, the
design propositions imply spatial transformations in the city or town.
R. Roggema (&)
Faculty of Design, Architecture and Building,
University of Technology Sydney, Broadway 15, Ultimo 2007,
NSW, Australia
e-mail: rob@cittaideale.eu
L. Vos
Lisa Vos Consulting, Sydney, Australia
J. Martin
Emiritus Professor La Trobe University, Bendigo, Australia
© Springer International Publishing AG 2017
W. Yan and W. Galloway (eds.), Rethinking Resilience,
Adaptation and Transformation in a Time of Change,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-50171-0_21
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