2011
DOI: 10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.368-373.3388
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Spatial Design Research for Urban Mitigation to Strength Urban Resilience

Abstract: Strengthening urban resilience is one of the main goals of urban mitigation. This document explains the concept of urban mitigation and urban resilience and demonstrates spatial relevance of hazard and vulnerability. From three levels, including urban scale, urban spatial structure and urban open space, spatial design methods for urban mitigation to strength urban resilience, namely resistance, adaptability and transformation are proposed based on characteristics of different phases of disaster process.

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…Some scholars began to scrutinize historical and wartime urban space changes [10], with Thilagam, N. L, for example, analyzing the morphology of medieval temple towns, which assisted in studying historical town space [11]. Wars, colonization, and disasters have caused damage to urban spaces, and the re-planning of damaged urban areas has significant implications for city recovery and trade expansion [12][13][14]. Recently, urban space planning has also incorporated tourism factors [15], with some scholars constructing theoretical hypotheses from aesthetics [16], land use [17,18], and climate change [19] to further the development of urban territorial space theories.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some scholars began to scrutinize historical and wartime urban space changes [10], with Thilagam, N. L, for example, analyzing the morphology of medieval temple towns, which assisted in studying historical town space [11]. Wars, colonization, and disasters have caused damage to urban spaces, and the re-planning of damaged urban areas has significant implications for city recovery and trade expansion [12][13][14]. Recently, urban space planning has also incorporated tourism factors [15], with some scholars constructing theoretical hypotheses from aesthetics [16], land use [17,18], and climate change [19] to further the development of urban territorial space theories.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Resilience usually can be understood as a meaning of "the ability to return to an initial state" [2]. Urban resilience could be against severe shock so that the urban system still maintains stability in structure and functions [3]. Holling applied the concept of resilience at the first time in the field of systems ecology [4].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%