1st Edition

Calibrating Coastal Resilience

By Sonia R Cháo Copyright 2025
    336 Pages 106 Color & 13 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    336 Pages 106 Color & 13 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Calibrating Coastal Resilience presents a conceptual reimagining of place in the era of climate change. The terroir framework introduced by the authors offers a holistic, data-driven approach to assessing vulnerabilities in the built environment. Inspired by the hyper-local relationships between humans, cultural traditions, and urban and natural contexts, the authors develop a place-based, historically sympathetic methodology for guiding climate-related urban policies, designs, and actions in coastal areas. Coastal communities have been among the first to experience the devastating consequences of the climate crisis. Using case studies from South Florida, the book illustrates the unique climate risks for this region, including flooding, hurricane, and sea-level rise scenarios, with a focus on the preservation of historic neighborhoods and buildings and reinforcement of built structures.

    Drawing from the authors’ extensive experience in community planning and historic preservation in cities severely affected by the impacts of climate change, this book introduces novel, practical methods for identifying and aligning preservation goals with resilience needs, including flood hazard models, survey instruments, a cultural asset benchmarking system, communication strategies, community toolkits, as well as a discussion of innovative governance structures that support resilience objectives. Refined through real-life application and the experience of Southeast Florida preparing and responding for climate change, these techniques are highly-specialized yet designed for ease of implementation.

    A valuable resource for professionals and students of architecture, urban planning, historic preservation, and local government, Calibrating Coastal Resilience offers communities clear guidelines and actionable steps toward creating place-based resilience planning strategies to safeguard the natural and built landscapes of their region.

    Contents

    Preface

    Author biography

    Contributors

    1. Embracing an Ecological Approach to Urban Design in the Anthropocene Era: Invaluable Lessons from History on the Advantages of Understanding, Evaluating, and Coexisting Harmoniously with Nature
      Sonia Cháo and Gustavo Sánchez Hugalde
    2. Multi-faceted Challenges and Socio-Economic Considerations
      Sonia Cháo with contributions by Gustavo Sánchez Hugalde
    3. Addressing the Nature-Culture Dichotomy through Adaptive City Siting and Design in Response to the Emerging Climate Predicament
      Sonia Cháo with contributions by Gustavo Sánchez Hugalde and Madeleine Li
    4. Manifesting the ‘Urban Terroir’: introducing a hyper-local & holistic framework for a climate-challenged era
      Sonia Cháo with contributions by Gustavo Sánchez Hugalde
    5. Re-mapping our Future through a Novel Approach: The Urban Terroir Principles, Priorities, Methods, and Tools
      Sonia Cháo
    6. Calibrating Coastal Urban Vulnerabilities and Resilience through Modeling
      Sonia Cháo and Benjamin Ghansah
    7. The 'SSBV Synoptic Survey': Precedents, Climate-Framework, Associated Protocols, and Contributions to the 'Storm Surge Building Vulnerability Model' Sonia Cháo, Benjamin Ghansah, and Timothy Norris
    8. Development of the Storm Surge Building Vulnerability Model (SSBV): A Hyper-local Flood Vulnerability Model for Coastal Regions
      Sonia Cháo and Benjamin Ghansah
    9. The Storm Surge Building Vulnerability Model: Assessing Coastal Morphological and Typological Paradigms through Four Case Studies
      Sonia Cháo and Benjamin Ghansah
    10. Resolving the Terse Paradox Between Historic Preservation and Climate Adaptation: A Proposed Sliding-Scale Benchmarking System
      Sonia Cháo
    11. Effectively Communicating Resilient Affordable Housing and Preservation Alternatives Messages to Community Stakeholders
      Sonia Cháo and Madeleine Li
    12. The evolving role of governmental partnerships in climate adaptation planning in the face of multiple and escalating flood hazards
      Katherine Hagemann, Sonia Cháo and Madeleine Li

     Acknowledgments

    Biography

    Sonia Cháo teaches, writes, and specialises in sustainable architecture and urbanism, resilient design, and historic preservation in the subtropics. She is the Associate Dean of Research at the University of Miami School of Architecture, the director of the Coastal Resilience (CoRe) Lab. She previously served as one of the founding co-directors of the interdisciplinary Master of Professional Science in Urban Sustainability and Resilience program, and was the prior director of the Center for Community & Urban Design in Miami between 2006 and 2021. She has led various interdisciplinary, and at times inter-institutional, research initiatives, which have led to the development of the SSBV model, the terroir framework, as well as numerous publications, exhibitions, symposia, and partnerships with communities to promote sustainable and climate-resilient design practices. Her work has received support from the National Endowment for the Arts, National Science Foundation, W.K. Kellogg Foundation, the Barr Foundation, and other funders.