ATUT 2025 Radical Care for Resilience in the Built Environment : Book of Abstracts
Teoksen toimittaja(t)
Nisonen, Essi
Castano De la Rosa, Raul
Pelsmakers, Sofie
Jegard, Lena
Tampere University
2025
Rakennetun ympäristön tiedekunta - Faculty of Built Environment
This publication is copyrighted. You may download, display and print it for Your own personal use. Commercial use is prohibited.
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-03-4278-4
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-03-4278-4
Tiivistelmä
The 17th Annual Symposium of Architectural Research (ATUT 2025) explores the fostering of resilience in the built environment through a radical care lens and approach. Here we explore contributions to this interdisciplinary dialogue on the role of education, the just energy transition, digitalisation, and the promotion of ecological values in shaping of resilient, caring futures for our built environments.
For us, radical care refers to an ethical commitment to prioritise well-being, equity, and sustainability in design and development processes for collective wellbeing – not just for some. Resilience, within this context, refers not only to infrastructural and environmental adaptability but also to social and emotional support systems that empower communities to thrive, and come back stronger after crisis events.
ATUT 2025 encouraged interdisciplinary contributions from fields such as architecture, architectural engineering, civil engineering, urban planning, digital technologies, social sciences, and policy studies. We welcomed a plethora of abstract submissions from educators, researchers, practitioners, and students who are contributing to this vital conversation and that address, but were not limited to, the themes of education, energy, digitalisation and ecology.
This book presents these double-blind peer-reviewed abstracts in their order of presentation in the symposium. Abstracts from registered symposium participants that were accepted but not presented can be found at the end of each section of the book.
For us, radical care refers to an ethical commitment to prioritise well-being, equity, and sustainability in design and development processes for collective wellbeing – not just for some. Resilience, within this context, refers not only to infrastructural and environmental adaptability but also to social and emotional support systems that empower communities to thrive, and come back stronger after crisis events.
ATUT 2025 encouraged interdisciplinary contributions from fields such as architecture, architectural engineering, civil engineering, urban planning, digital technologies, social sciences, and policy studies. We welcomed a plethora of abstract submissions from educators, researchers, practitioners, and students who are contributing to this vital conversation and that address, but were not limited to, the themes of education, energy, digitalisation and ecology.
This book presents these double-blind peer-reviewed abstracts in their order of presentation in the symposium. Abstracts from registered symposium participants that were accepted but not presented can be found at the end of each section of the book.
