3.8 Article

Concepts and practices for transforming infrastructure from rigid to adaptable

Journal

SUSTAINABLE AND RESILIENT INFRASTRUCTURE
Volume 6, Issue 3-4, Pages 213-234

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/23789689.2019.1599608

Keywords

Infrastructure; agile; flexible; adaptation; smart systems; resilience

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1444750]

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Infrastructure is increasingly considered too rigid to adapt to changing climate and future uncertainties, posing risks to service delivery and public welfare. Novel infrastructure and technologies supporting adaptivity through various characteristics have emerged, such as smart technologies and renewable energy generation, with the potential to transform infrastructure provision and management with institutional and cultural support.
Infrastructure are increasingly being recognized as too rigid to quickly adapt to a changing climate and a non-stationary future. This rigidness poses risks to infrastructure service delivery and public welfare. Adaptivity in infrastructure is critical for managing uncertainties to continue providing services, yet little is known about how infrastructure can be made more agile and flexible for improved adaptive capacity. A literature review identified approximately fifty examples of novel infrastructure and technologies which support adaptivity through one or more of ten theoretical characteristics of adaptive infrastructure. From these examples, several infrastructure forms and possible strategies for adaptivity emerged, including smart technologies, combined centralized/decentralized organizational structures, and renewable electricity generation. With institutional and cultural support, such novel structures and systems have the potential to transform infrastructure provision and management.

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