Geodesign for Environmental Resilience

Cureton, Paul (2024) Geodesign for Environmental Resilience. In: The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Sustainable Resources and Ecosystem Resilience :. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. ISBN 9783030677763

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Abstract

Geodesign is a collaborative decision-making framework and process utilizing design and natural sciences formulated around geographic information systems (GIS) models and evaluation that has been established for over thirty years by Carl Steinitz. Geodesign uses various methods and GIS, including environmental datasets, procedural modeling, and cloud computing for rationalized decision-making. The Geodesign framework has the potential to address local and regional environmental planning resilience, and the entry maps a range of geographic applications. The entry provides a historical overview of geodesign and presents an open user experience (UX) process for replication and sampling of applied geographic cases supporting the framework’s value. The article also explores a hypothesis of the emergent potential between geodesign and connected environments, particularly environmental digital twins, and discusses future possibilities. Accounting for criticisms of Geodesign, the framework synthesizes stakeholder values and environmental science, making it a unique approach to considering complex ecosystems and exploring sociological and technological relationships for future climate scenarios.

Item Type:
Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings
Subjects:
?? geodesignenvironmental resiliencegis mappingurban digital twins ??
ID Code:
218688
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
20 May 2024 15:15
Refereed?:
No
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
18 Aug 2024 23:17