Sea-level Rise, Storm Surges, and Delaware’s Resilience Challenge (with a Sandy update)

Update Note, October 30, 2012 With Post-tropical Cyclone Sandy still whirling around somewhere to my west, the article below feels prescient.  It wasn’t of course – there was no advance knowledge of this particular storm – but what just happened with Sandy is well in line with climate change trends.

Fundamentals of Resilient Design #2: Designing Homes for More Intense Storms

  Flooding from Tropical Storm Irene in Brandon, Vermont on September 12, 2011. Photo: Angela Drexel – Creative Commons license Anybody who was in Vermont one year ago this week and witnessed the raging floodwaters of Hurricane Irene and the havoc they wreaked, understands the vulnerabilities we face from intense

Fundamentals of Resilient Design #1: Making the Case

I thought a lot about resilience last year, during a six-week sabbatical bike ride through the Southwest. I covered a little over 1,900 miles, most of it over land that hadn’t seen a drop of rain since the previous fall; some of those areas—mostly in Texas—still hadn’t received significant precipitation months after my return home.