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Idea by

Lucas Ormazábal

Re-producir

Santiago, Chile
Architect and Photographer, director and partner in projects related to architectural and territorial practice and research

Call for ideas 2021

RURAL WATER STATION


A resilence framework for rural occupation

RURAL WATER STATION


A resilence framework for rural occupation
Resilient network of community water infrastructures in the insular rurality of Chiloé
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Type of project
  • Systemic changes

Due to excessive human activity and the ecological impacts that this implies, today our planet is rapidly transforming, jeopardizing environmental sustainability on a global scale. This crisis is directly related to water and its availability.

Faced with the excessive, superfluous and ostentatious of contemporary cities, the rural is related to the most basic and essential needs of living, and also the territory where the impacts of the climate crisis are most strongly expressed.

Under this context, it is necessary to change towards a project resilience paradigm. A potential strategic and sustainable design of infrastructures would not only have the capacity to be a renewable source of water, but also a system of hydric parts of regional articulation and supply, which enhance the sustainable development of the associated communities and, at the same time, mitigate product impacts of the climate crisis.


RURAL WATER STATION


A resilence framework for rural occupation

RURAL WATER STATION


A resilence framework for rural occupation
Resilient network of community water infrastructures in the insular rurality of Chiloé
File under
Type of project
  • Systemic changes

Due to excessive human activity and the ecological impacts that this implies, today our planet is rapidly transforming, jeopardizing environmental sustainability on a global scale. This crisis is directly related to water and its availability.

Faced with the excessive, superfluous and ostentatious of contemporary cities, the rural is related to the most basic and essential needs of living, and also the territory where the impacts of the climate crisis are most strongly expressed.

Under this context, it is necessary to change towards a project resilience paradigm. A potential strategic and sustainable design of infrastructures would not only have the capacity to be a renewable source of water, but also a system of hydric parts of regional articulation and supply, which enhance the sustainable development of the associated communities and, at the same time, mitigate product impacts of the climate crisis.



Idea by

Lucas Ormazábal
Re-producir
Santiago
Chile
Architect and Photographer, director and partner in projects related to architectural and territorial practice and research