
Reviews
Mitigating climate change and preserving human well-being both depend on our built environment with vulnerable populations suffering double jeopardy—greater exposure and degraded resilience. Stephen Verderber skillfully analyzes lessons from hurricane Katrina, the COVID pandemic, and infectious disease to inform the design of more equitable and salutogenic settings in the Anthropocene.
Book Details
Preface and Acknowledgements
Part I: Coping with Catastrophe: Past and Present
1. Introduction
2. Pandemical Architecture for Health: Complexities and Contradictions in History
3. Pandemical Architecture
Preface and Acknowledgements
Part I: Coping with Catastrophe: Past and Present
1. Introduction
2. Pandemical Architecture for Health: Complexities and Contradictions in History
3. Pandemical Architecture for Health: COVID-19
Part II: Equitable Built Environments for Health in the Anthropocene
4. Theraserialization and Health Equity
5. Equitable Places for Older Persons to Live
6. Posthumanism, Architecture, and Health Equity
7. Architecture for Health Equity: 2050 and Beyond
Appendices
A. A Nature Immersion Center—Design
B. Equitable Places for Older Persons to Live: Design Notes and References
Index