Genevieve Oller - Marketing Executive
On 18 September I attended Ciria’s infrastructure
risk and resilience to natural hazards
event, chaired by John Beckford (UCL) and including a host of speakers from
the Cabinet Office, TfL, University of Oxford, John Dora Consulting and
contributions to the panel discussion from Arup (who also hosted the event).
Tom Sutton of the Cabinet Office did a fantastic job of setting the
scene on how the government currently thinks about and assesses risk to
infrastructure. Whilst the event’s focus was on the risk of natural hazards,
Tom reminded the audience that risk also extends to terrorism and an ageing
population, amongst other factors. He made the point that if it’s happened
somewhere once, it can be predicted (i.e. the data will exist) and someone
somewhere will have already done the research. John Dora, another speaker at
the event and a Temple associate, made the point that around 10 years ago
research found that manhole covers in London were going to explode out of the
ground, on account of historic under ground cabling and an increase in rainfall.
Fast-forward a decade and the newspapers are full of stories about random
manhole explosions, but how random were they?
Helen Woolston of TfL gave a highly engaging talk about their
current asset management programme, which extends to 2031. She brought home the
complexity of the job at hand, with many assets coming from the Victorian
period. It was a reminder that in practice, whilst the research is out there to
plan for future asset management, is it possible to implement it within such an
extensive scheme?
John Dora of John Dora
consulting’s solution for resilience of the UK’s infrastructure was ‘no
regrets’ construction, therefore having resilience as a major aspiration from
step one. This is something that is true of Temple’s working processes, through
our work that embeds sustainability from the earliest possible stage of
planning, leading to high CEEQUAL and BREEAM scores. John dug a little deeper
by stating that one of the key things to obtaining this was education. He
mentioned that only a very small number of engineering courses offer
interdependency thinking as a module.
The event posed and answered serious questions about resilience of
infrastructure to impending natural and man-made risks. It was interesting to
find that things that seem so certain can have predictability to them if the
research finds it’s way to the right people, but how does that happen? John
stated that organisations such as Ciria and Engineering the Future could
be the drivers of change. In the panel discussion several speakers mentioned
the need for government to take notice, and that it is often once stories have
hit the press that they do so (the case with the manhole covers). However, before
there is a drastic change to how our media operates, perhaps it sits with
individuals to properly circulate the key research papers. Temple is an
advocate of sharing information; we hope that we can be a small part of this
proposed solution.
Ciria’s next event is run in conjunction with Temple and is on the
theme of community engagement, find further details here.
This event seems something very interesting and informative!! I am glad to read such a nice blog!! Well, I want to plan couple of events in NYC related to our business products. So, Can you tell me any professional planner for our events?
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