Photo: Jocelyn Augustino/FEMA

While The New Orleans Principles predated the formation of the Resilient Design Institute, it was seminal in creation of the institute. Alex was the editor and lead author of this set of guiding principles, along with two other documents that emerged from a series of charrettes organized following Hurricane Katrina in the fall of 2005. 

The charrettes were organized by several Midwestern chapters of the U.S. Green Building Council and held in advance of the Greenbuild Conference in Atlanta in November 2005. Close to 200 people participated in the charrettes, including more than 30 from New Orleans and other Gulf Coast areas affected by the back-to-back hurricanes in October of that year. The flagship outcome of the charrettes was The New Orleans Principles: Celebrating the Rich History of New Orleans Through Commitment to a Sustainable Future. The includes ten guiding principles that are applicable to coastal locations seeking to rebuild following major tropical storms, especially areas with areas facing economic hardship. 

The other two documents to emerge from the charrettes are Learning from Disaster: A Vision and Plan for Sustainable Schools and Revitalized Public Education in New Orleans in the Wake of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and Gulf Coast Reconstruction: Creating a Disaster-Resilient and Sustainable American Gulf Coast.