Questioning the Constructed Intangibilities of Water Resources within the Modern Household

The built environment defines how societies shape relationships within hydrological systems to ensure water security within natural and constructed limitations. Globally, due to geographic, climatic, and anthropogenic reasons, the experience of water scarcity is highly unequal. Within water-secure...

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Main Author: Mandi Pretorius
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Architectural Research Centers Consortium 2023-11-01
Series:Enquiry: The ARCC Journal of Architectural Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.arcc-repository.arcc-journal.org/index.php/arccjournal/article/view/1154
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author Mandi Pretorius
author_facet Mandi Pretorius
author_sort Mandi Pretorius
collection DOAJ
description The built environment defines how societies shape relationships within hydrological systems to ensure water security within natural and constructed limitations. Globally, due to geographic, climatic, and anthropogenic reasons, the experience of water scarcity is highly unequal. Within water-secure households, water is often taken for granted as a resource; this is in stark contrast to over a quarter of the world, including at least two million American citizens, for whom water insecurity intersects with the risk of losing residential tenure and heightened disease burden (Urban Waters Learning Network, n.d.; Fedinick et al. 2019). In this paper, I show how centralized water governance models typically result in highly varied levels of household water security. Globally, public and private water authorities have adopted an economic model of scarcity in water management. Governments and service providers attempt to forestall unsustainable environmental degradation, costly energy intensity, and the mismanagement crippling large-scale infrastructural systems with the revenue they derive from treating water as an economic good. However, these models do not guarantee water access, safety, or affordability and have resulted in the unequal distribution of water scarcity between households. The issues with centralized water management and the burden on communities are discussed through a case study of the ‘Day Zero’ drought in Cape Town, South Africa, which took place from 2015-2018. I discuss water access in two households before and during this three-year drought and emphasize how the built environment factors into consumption patterns, water tariffing, and the regulation of water access. In contrast, I argue that decentralized and on-site water management could mediate regional and socio-economic disparities through increasing local water access. I foreground urban disparities in local water access to advocate for the decentralization of water infrastructure and an increase in access to and support for household water and energy security. Residential-to-neighborhood structures for on-site water management could provide more equitable resource negotiation within the built environment, increasing access and widespread security as locally attuned hybrid-decentralized systems.
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spelling doaj.art-417bbb3026874c9baf1c22beac877bf62023-11-11T02:49:27ZengArchitectural Research Centers ConsortiumEnquiry: The ARCC Journal of Architectural Research2329-93392023-11-0120210.17831/enqarcc.v20i2.1154Questioning the Constructed Intangibilities of Water Resources within the Modern HouseholdMandi Pretorius The built environment defines how societies shape relationships within hydrological systems to ensure water security within natural and constructed limitations. Globally, due to geographic, climatic, and anthropogenic reasons, the experience of water scarcity is highly unequal. Within water-secure households, water is often taken for granted as a resource; this is in stark contrast to over a quarter of the world, including at least two million American citizens, for whom water insecurity intersects with the risk of losing residential tenure and heightened disease burden (Urban Waters Learning Network, n.d.; Fedinick et al. 2019). In this paper, I show how centralized water governance models typically result in highly varied levels of household water security. Globally, public and private water authorities have adopted an economic model of scarcity in water management. Governments and service providers attempt to forestall unsustainable environmental degradation, costly energy intensity, and the mismanagement crippling large-scale infrastructural systems with the revenue they derive from treating water as an economic good. However, these models do not guarantee water access, safety, or affordability and have resulted in the unequal distribution of water scarcity between households. The issues with centralized water management and the burden on communities are discussed through a case study of the ‘Day Zero’ drought in Cape Town, South Africa, which took place from 2015-2018. I discuss water access in two households before and during this three-year drought and emphasize how the built environment factors into consumption patterns, water tariffing, and the regulation of water access. In contrast, I argue that decentralized and on-site water management could mediate regional and socio-economic disparities through increasing local water access. I foreground urban disparities in local water access to advocate for the decentralization of water infrastructure and an increase in access to and support for household water and energy security. Residential-to-neighborhood structures for on-site water management could provide more equitable resource negotiation within the built environment, increasing access and widespread security as locally attuned hybrid-decentralized systems. https://www.arcc-repository.arcc-journal.org/index.php/arccjournal/article/view/1154water scarcitydecentralized water managementhousehold water security
spellingShingle Mandi Pretorius
Questioning the Constructed Intangibilities of Water Resources within the Modern Household
Enquiry: The ARCC Journal of Architectural Research
water scarcity
decentralized water management
household water security
title Questioning the Constructed Intangibilities of Water Resources within the Modern Household
title_full Questioning the Constructed Intangibilities of Water Resources within the Modern Household
title_fullStr Questioning the Constructed Intangibilities of Water Resources within the Modern Household
title_full_unstemmed Questioning the Constructed Intangibilities of Water Resources within the Modern Household
title_short Questioning the Constructed Intangibilities of Water Resources within the Modern Household
title_sort questioning the constructed intangibilities of water resources within the modern household
topic water scarcity
decentralized water management
household water security
url https://www.arcc-repository.arcc-journal.org/index.php/arccjournal/article/view/1154
work_keys_str_mv AT mandipretorius questioningtheconstructedintangibilitiesofwaterresourceswithinthemodernhousehold