Resistance and resilience – paradigms for critical local infrastructure

Author:

Rogers Christopher D. F.1,Bouch Christopher J.2,Williams Stephen3,Barber Austin R. G.4,Baker Christopher J.5,Bryson John R.6,Chapman David N.7,Chapman Lee8,Coaffee Jon9,Jefferson Ian10,Quinn Andrew D.10

Affiliation:

1. Professor of Geotechnical Engineering, Director, Birmingham Centre for Resilience Research and Education, Birmingham, UK

2. Research Fellow, School of Civil Engineering, University of Birmingham, UK

3. Research Fellow, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, UK

4. Lecturer, Centre for Urban and Regional Studies, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, UK

5. Professor of Environmental Fluid Mechanics, Director of the Birmingham Centre for Railway Research and Education, Birmingham, UK

6. Professor of Enterprise and Economic Geography, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, UK

7. Reader, School of Civil Engineering, University of Birmingham, UK

8. Senior Lecturer, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, UK

9. Professor of Spatial Planning and Urban Resilience, Director, Centre for Urban and Regional Studies, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, UK

10. Senior Lecturer, School of Civil Engineering, University of Birmingham, UK

Abstract

‘Critical infrastructure’ generally refers to significant pieces of plant and equipment, such as power stations and motorways. High population densities in cities, and the increasing interconnectedness of the services and supply chains that sustain them, mean local infrastructure is equally important. Local infrastructure must be able to cope with system shocks, whether from natural hazards, terrorism or catastrophic failures. Engineering design plays a major part in achieving this, but shocks will occur that overwhelm even the most conservative design. Local infrastructure must therefore be able to adapt to, and recover from, shocks: it must be resilient. Local infrastructure has evolved with little consideration for resilience of the interconnected system as a whole, whereas resilience has been the subject of much research in many other systems. This paper explores the lessons that local infrastructure can learn from such research by reviewing literature related to resilience of ecological, economic, physical infrastructure, community/social and government systems. A critical analysis highlights the factors affecting resilience and different approaches that need to be taken into account when attempting to model infrastructure at a local scale. The ultimate aim is to provide an evidence base on which to build resilience into various infrastructures and direct future local infrastructure resilience research in an age of austerity.

Publisher

Thomas Telford Ltd.

Subject

Civil and Structural Engineering

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