From the Editors from Environmental Building News
A Bold Plan for New Orleans
It is easy to see what led to the catastrophe Hurricane Katrina wrought on New Orleans: a city of a half-million people at an average elevation of six feet (2 m) below sea level; wetlands that have been disappearing for decades for lack of replacement silt from the Mississippi River’s annual flooding; a city that has been sinking as its silt soils compress; levees that are designed to withstand only Category 3 hurricanes in an age when global climate change appears to be spawning more catastrophic storms; and years of inadequate funding to maintain even the existing Category-3-rated levees that were built to protect the Crescent City. In the aftermath of the devastating late-August storm, as rescue teams search for survivors and carry out the grim task of recovering the dead, discussion is well underway about what to do next in heavily damaged New Orleans—and nearby cities including Gulfport and Biloxi, Mississippi. New Orleans is the first large American city to be devastated by a catastrophic event since a mammoth earthquake and subsequent fires destroyed much of San Francisco in 1906, leaving three-quarters of its population homeless, and before that the Great Chicago Fire in 1871 destroyed a third of that city. From the San Francisco earthquake we learned to build structures that were more earthquake-resistant, and we instituted seismic building codes. From Chicago’s fire we learned to replace wood-frame structures with masonry and steel, and we instituted rigorous fire codes. What will Katrina teach us? In many respects, New Orleans should not be rebuilt in its present location—a lowland bowl situated between a lake and a river channel where this largest of America’s rivers forms its delta. There are very good reasons for accepting the reality that the combination of subsiding land, rising sea levels, and the effect of shipping channels in funneling storm surges into New Orleans makes long-term survival of the city either very doubtful or highly expensive. Serious consideration should be given to the idea of relocating the city to stable land, either somewhat inland from the coast or farther from the delta where it can be better protected. But there’s almost no chance of that happening. New Orleans will be rebuilt where it is. Our nation has learned a lot in its 200-plus years, but we’re neither that smart nor that bold. So what can be done in rebuilding New Orleans to make it a better, more sustainable place? A great deal. The opportunities are exceeded only by the creativity that exists in the sustainable design community today. We have an opportunity with New Orleans to put into practice—in a far-reaching and highly visible manner—a vision infused by the collective wisdom of the green building movement. If common sense, intelligence, and forethought can prevail in the ensuing debates about the future of this great city, we will end up with a model that can be emulated around the world. Our nation can rebound from the shame of our hapless response to Katrina by demonstrating to the world a commitment to sustainable development. In this spirit, we offer the following ten-point plan for moving this dialog ahead. These suggestions are directed specifically at New Orleans, though many of the ideas apply as well to other coastal areas damaged by Hurricane Katrina. 1. Institute a Sustainable New Orleans planning task force. This task force should be comprised of 20 to 30 of the best minds in sustainable development, urban planning, and green building, along with at least an equal number of community leaders of New Orleans and the surrounding region. Participation and buy-in by residents is critical to the long-term success of any sustainability initiative in a city or region, and that seems particularly the case in New Orleans, where too many have been disenfranchised for too long. This planning process should generate neighborhood, community, city, and regional plans that address such issues as housing, employment, government, transit, open space, healthcare, education, water, sewer, energy, and telecommunications. This task force should be funded at a level that will permit these outside visionaries and local participants to take leave of many of their other responsibilities for an intensive six- to twelve-month period, and the initiative should be enriched with the best support staff of computer modelers, ecologists, geologists, building scientists, and engineers that money can buy. This task force should be established as quickly as possible.
[enlarge image]
This satellite photo, taken in 2001, shows shipping canals carved through the marshes and mudflats of the Mississippi River Delta and sediment carried into the Gulf of Mexico.
October 1, 2005
Reader-contributed comments related to A Bold Plan for New Orleans - EBN: 14:10. Comments are listed with newest at the top.
A Bold Plan for New Orleans
Posted by
Michael Poloukhine
on Oct 11, 2005, 05:45 PM
Couldn't hurt if every one of us that supports this contacted the folks that speak for us in Washington DC. Seeing as Congress effectively hold the purse strings to the funding for the re-building work we should work to get them on board with the concept.
Nothing like constituents letting them know how they feel to help support what they hear from a lobbyist...
http://www.vote-smart.org/
Couldn't hurt if every one of us that supports this contacted the folks that speak for us in Washington DC. Seeing as Congress effectively hold the purse strings to the funding for the re-building work we should work to get them on board with the concept.
Nothing like constituents letting them know how they feel to help support what they hear from a lobbyist...
http://www.vote-smart.org/
A Bold Plan for New Orleans
Posted by
Elaine Tanner
on Oct 1, 2005, 10:24 PM
This work is wonderful!!! I sincerely hope the authors of it have sent it to FEMA, Mayor Nagin, Bush, CNN, FOX, ABC, CBS, NBC, etc. etc. etc. The possibility really needs to be available for all people to consider.
Please, if you haven't yet, please please push to have the city rebuilt in your suggested way. Thanks for a job well done!
This work is wonderful!!! I sincerely hope the authors of it have sent it to FEMA, Mayor Nagin, Bush, CNN, FOX, ABC, CBS, NBC, etc. etc. etc. The possibility really needs to be available for all people to consider.
Please, if you haven't yet, please please push to have the city rebuilt in your suggested way. Thanks for a job well done!
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More comments


Are you aware that the Mississippi no longer wants to go past New Orleans? See this article: http://www.newyorker.com/archive/content/?050912fr_archive01
Is anyone talking about taking down the Atchafalaya dam?