One of Many Tunnels Running Through the Hilly Landscape of the Sanriku Coast
Title
One of Many Tunnels Running Through the Hilly Landscape of the Sanriku Coast
Post-Disaster: Japan's Response to the 2011 Earthquake and Tsunami
Subject
natural disasters; disaster planning; tunnels
Description
Instead of leveling the hills on the Sanriku Coast, tunnels are being built to run through the hills, which helps preserve the natural topography but also provides better transportation to and from the coast.
This project was funded by Bernard and Anne Spitzer Travel Fellowship for research projects involving travel abroad and incorporating the study of architecture, landscape architecture, or urbanism.
The purpose of this research trip to Japan is to identify the qualities of successful post-disaster city planning and architecture, which can potentially be applied towards immediate and impervious strategies on a global level. Since the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, Japan has undergone massive improvements, due to advancements in construction technology, community-centered and forward-thinking designs as well as a general faith in rebuilding and recovery. Albeit, some of the tsunami-prevention strategies have stirred international controversy, the Japanese are the undoubted frontrunners in ensuring resiliency in saving human lives. Hopefully this information will shed light on some of the ways we as designers can rethink disaster-risk management and recovery.
Creator
Nuguid, Vail
Rights
This image is under copyright. You need to contact copyright owners for any commercial or non-commercial uses. Contact information: digital@ccny.cuny.edu.
Vail Nuguid
Type
Architecture and City Planning
Identifier
T0427
Coverage
Ofunato, Iwate, Japan
Files
Citation
Nuguid, Vail, “One of Many Tunnels Running Through the Hilly Landscape of the Sanriku Coast,” Spitzer School of Architecture, accessed November 8, 2024, http://digitalscholarship.ccny.cuny.edu/architecture/items/show/1091.
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