RESEARCH ARTICLE

Design support tools to sustain climate change adaptation at the local level: A review and reflection on their suitability

  • Catherine Dubois , 1 ,
  • Geneviève Cloutier , 2 ,
  • André Potvin , 1 ,
  • Luc Adolphe , 3 ,
  • Florent Joerin , 2
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  • 1. School of Architecture, Laval University, 1 côte de la Fabrique, Québec City, G1R 3V6, Canada
  • 2. CRAD, Laval University, 2325, rue des Bibliothèques, Québec City, G1V 0A6, Canada
  • 3. INSA of Toulouse, LMDC, 136, avenue de Rangueil, 31077, Toulouse Cedex 4, France

Received date: 09 Jun 2014

Accepted date: 11 Dec 2014

Published date: 01 Apr 2015

Copyright

2014 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Abstract

For mid-latitude cities, higher summer temperatures due to climate change are a cause for concern because they aggravate the urban heat island phenomenon and reduce thermal comfort inside buildings. By acquiring the appropriate knowledge and skills, architects and urban designers can become key actors in adaptation to climate change. Two workshops bringing together architects and urban designers provided evidence of deficiencies in this area. We hypothesize that a design support tool (DST) focused on the issue of adaptation of mid-latitude cities to rising summer temperatures could help improve knowledge and skills of professionals in the field. The first section presents the results taken from a review and classification of DSTs, which highlight the tools' features that are likely to reach this goal. Tools of the “hybrid” category seem most appropriate. To verify this, seven DSTs were selected and tested by fourteen students enrolled in a graduate-level architecture design studio. The second section presents the results from this test, including an analysis of the final projects, a web-based questionnaire and two focus groups. The relevance of hybrid approaches is established, but the results bring into question the capacity of a single DST to meet the individual and multiple needs of professionals.

Cite this article

Catherine Dubois , Geneviève Cloutier , André Potvin , Luc Adolphe , Florent Joerin . Design support tools to sustain climate change adaptation at the local level: A review and reflection on their suitability[J]. Frontiers of Architectural Research, 2015 , 4(1) : 1 -11 . DOI: 10.1016/j.foar.2014.12.002

Outlines

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