New BRE Trust research programme tackles built environment resilience
The BRE Trust has announced a major three year funding programme to improve the resilience of buildings and infrastructure to the growing threats of flooding, wind damage and overheating associated with climate change.
In January 2014 parts of the UK experienced rainfall of three times the historic average. An estimated 7,000 properties were flooded and 750,000 homes were left without power. This added to growing evidence that the early impacts of climate change will be the more frequent occurrence of damaging weather events, ranging from storms and flooding to heatwaves and droughts.
“Last year’s devastating floods and storms revealed our vulnerability to extreme weather and were indicative of wider resilience problems,” said Guy Hammersley, BRE Group board director, research & innovation. “Our built environment is struggling to cope with a rapidly changing world, and there is an urgent need to strengthen its resistance to short-term shocks and long-term change – and to improve its ability to quickly recover from crises.”
To this end the BRE Trust, the largest UK charity dedicated specifically to built environment research, is funding a Resilient Built Environment themed research programme, with a focus on climate resilience. Earlier research and consultations have highlighted three major climatic impacts with associated gaps in existing knowledge – flooding, wind and overheating – which are the priority areas for this programme.
The research will be closely aligned with the work of the BRE Centre for Resilience, created in 2014 to address adverse weather effects, as well as social, security and disaster issues. The BRE University Centres of Excellence are an integral part of the Centre and will also be fully integrated into the programme.
The programme will be begin in April 2015 with five initial projects on: