Throwing Shade: Heatwaves, Emergency Preparedness, and Produced Risk

Item

Title
Throwing Shade: Heatwaves, Emergency Preparedness, and Produced Risk
Description
Throwing Shade introduces a series of public cooling landscapes designed to offer relief both daily and in emergencies. Through considering networks of infrastructure and public acupuncture, the design proposes heat escapes situated within, and with the capacity to be leveraged by, the social infrastructure of New Orleans’ Seventh Ward neighborhood. Inspired by the routes of Second Line parades, held by Social, Aid, and Pleasure Club mutual aid organizations, the project focuses on movements and moments within the neighborhood—specifically, the library, park, highway underpass, and street medians. Each site has both distinct and connected histories, encompassing legacies of racism, resistance, and celebration, that are reflected in the design. Elements include infrastructure un-building, shade structures, tree plantings, de-paving, grading, water features, and solar energy capture. Through the throwing of shade, the project provides a framework for spatial memory and climatic justice.
Creator
Stein, Ciara
Subject
Emergency Preparedness
Environmental Justice
Heat
New Orleans
Risk
Social Infrastructure
Landscape architecture
Urban planning
Design
Contributor
Desimini, Jill
Date
2021-05-24T09:32:51Z
2021
2021-05-21
2021-05
2021-05-24T09:32:51Z
Type
Thesis or Dissertation
text
Format
application/pdf
application/pdf
Identifier
Stein, Ciara. 2021. Throwing Shade: Heatwaves, Emergency Preparedness, and Produced Risk. Master's thesis, Harvard Graduate School of Design.
28541602
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37367686
Language
en