Building Resilience

The essence of Resiliency – Respond, Recover, and Renew.

There are many thoughts and emotions in play as we look back to that awful day when the World Trade Centre collapsed after the terrorist attack of 9/11. One word keeps coming to mind – Resiliency.

We responded to the tragedy and despite the pain, the anger, and the compassion that moved us, we took action to recover and to move beyond the horrors of that day.

That is the essence of Resiliency – Respond, Recover, and Renew.

We have learned many things over the past 20 years, but one of the most important lessons has been the need to strengthen our capacity for Resilience.

It is more than building stronger buildings or strengthening our first responder capabilities. Resiliency is a state of mind and a collective commitment to be better prepared to prevent or to recover from any catastrophe that man or nature might bring our way.

And nothing is more important than the lesson so painfully learned then and every day since – by coming together, we are stronger, more resilient, and better prepared for tomorrow.


 

 A message from the Pacific Northwest Building Resilience Coalition

 

 


 

PNBRC

Recent Posts

Why We Need to Incorporate Climate Data Into New Construction Planning

Climate change isn't just a buzzword — its effects are becoming more cataclysmic. It is…

1 month ago

Green cement production is scaling up – and it could cut the carbon footprint of construction

Aside from water, concrete is the most-used material in the world, with about 14 billion…

2 months ago

New stormwater infrastructure is needed for Canadian cities

Flooding in Montréal, and other Canadian cities, is becoming a more frequent occurrence.

3 months ago

Ancient Rome had ways to counter the urban heat. What are history’s lessons for today

As intense heat breaks records around the world, a little-reported fact offers some hope for…

4 months ago

More cities are getting hit by multiple disasters, and that complicates everything from insurance to rebuilding

Climate change will bring new weather patterns that are beyond emergency managers’ current playbooks, which…

4 months ago

To cut the carbon that goes into buildings, we need radical change

New research shows while we can greatly reduce embodied carbon in Australia, it will require…

4 months ago