Summary: | Disasters are perceived as singular apocalyptical events that rely on vernacular shifts that are often too slow to adapt before the next hurricane hits. This thesis redefines hurricanes as an opportunity to innovate in new ways of building that take advantage of the ensuing scarcities and limitations. The site is located on the island of St Martin where I grew up. After speaking to multiple actors in the government and the building industry, their concerns denote a need for adaptivity to future disasters to enable a new sustainable economy that is not constrained by European and French regulations and empowers the local government to act on its own to explore methodologies of resilience. This thesis answers some of these issues by re-designing the site of belle creole an abandoned hotel resort and transforming it into a material and disaster resilience research center for construction testing and certification. By focusing on an existing site that has undergone many hurricanes, I propose a symbiotic intervention for building re-use where new, low-carbon and site-specific re-sources come to support existing damaged architecture. The proposal blends the old with the new to preserve history while innovating for the future and tackle its challenges. New architectural interventions using local materials become an opportunity to tackle systemic issues while reducing material waste and labor. The new center will help expand European regulation, grow skills and jobs in the construction and sustainability industry and explore solutions to climate change’s impact on the territory. The thesis is defined in three parts, an overview of the territory, the site and its constraints and the architectural intervention and its evolution through time.
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