Bushfire-proof house design
Novel bushfire-proof house design could help people flee rather than risk fighting.
Professor Deborah Ascher Barnstone, Head of School, School of Architecture.
By 2030, climate change will make one in 25 Australian homes “uninsurable” if greenhouse gas emissions continue unabated, with riverine flooding posing the greatest insurance risk, a new Climate Council analysis finds.
As a professor of architecture, I find this analysis grim, yet unsurprising. One reason is because Australian housing is largely unfit for the challenges of climate change.
In the past two years alone we’ve seen over 3,000 homes razed in the 2019-2020 megafires, and over 3,600 homes destroyed in New South Wales Northern Rivers region in the recent floods.
Building houses better at withstanding the impacts of climate change is one way we can protect ourselves in the face of future catastrophic conditions.
Read the full story in The Conversation: How our bushfire-proof house design could help people flee rather than risk fighting the flames