RMIT University
Browse

Critical factors for successful housing reconstruction projects following a major disaster

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 22:16 authored by Zabihullah Sadiqi, Vaughan Coffey, Bambang TrigunarsyahBambang Trigunarsyah
Post-disaster reconstruction projects are often considered ineffectual or unproductive because on many occasions in the past they have performed extremely poorly during post-contract occupation, or have failed altogether to deliver acceptable outcomes. In some cases, these projects have already failed even before their completion, leading many sponsor aid organisations to hold these projects up as examples of how not to deliver housing reconstruction. Research into some previous unsuccessful projects has revealed that often the lack of adequate knowledge regarding the context and complexity involved in the implementation of these projects is generally responsible for their failure. Post-disaster reconstruction projects are certainly very complex in nature, often very context-specific and they can vary widely in magnitude. Despite such complexity, reconstruction projects can still have a high likelihood of success if adequate consideration is given to the importance of factors which are known to positively influence reconstruction efforts. Good outcomes can be achieved when planners and practitioners ensure best practices are embedded in the design of reconstruction projects at the time reconstruction projects they are first instigated. This paper outlines and discusses factors that significantly contribute to the successful delivery of post-disaster housing reconstruction projects.

History

Start page

1

End page

12

Total pages

12

Outlet

Proceedings of the 19th Triennial CIB World Building Congress (CIB 2013)

Editors

Stephen Kajewski, Karen Manley and Keith Hampson

Name of conference

CIB 2013

Publisher

Queensland University of Technology

Place published

Brisbane, Australia

Start date

2013-05-05

End date

2013-05-09

Language

English

Copyright

© 2013 Queensland University of Technology

Former Identifier

2006087653

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2018-10-24