

Fire Triangulation: Past meets Present meets Future Case Study
This triangulated case study extends across continents and centuries to discuss parallels between events that have historically been considered as mutually exclusive, therein studied in silos.
Triangulating transdisciplinary data amassed from studies of both past and present wildland and urban fires, a system of systems approach is employed by means of illuminating how, at the level of biochemistry, physics, and the wider sciences, fire behaviours found in wildlands have become manifest in cities, and the relevance thereof to architectural, urban/peri-urban design, and town and city planning futures.
The scenarios were made in:
2018
The scenarios look out to:
2066
Project facts
United Kingdom
London
2018
Submitted by:
Melissa Sterry, PhD
Project leader
January 13, 2021
How to cite this page:
Melissa Sterry, PhD
Fire Triangulation: Past meets Present meets Future Case Study
1/13/2021
Resources
Citation: Sterry, M. L., (2018) Panarchistic Architecture: Building Wildland-Urban Interface Resilience to Wildfire through Design Thinking, Practice and Building Codes Modelled on Ecological Systems Theory. PhD Thesis, Advanced Virtual and Technological Architecture Research [AVATAR] group, University of Greenwich, London.
Citation: Sterry, M. L., (2018) Panarchistic Architecture: Building Wildland-Urban Interface Resilience to Wildfire through Design Thinking, Practice and Building Codes Modelled on Ecological Systems Theory. PhD Thesis, Advanced Virtual and Technological Architecture Research [AVATAR] group, University of Greenwich, London.
Citation: Sterry, M. L., (2018) Panarchistic Architecture: Building Wildland-Urban Interface Resilience to Wildfire through Design Thinking, Practice and Building Codes Modelled on Ecological Systems Theory. PhD Thesis, Advanced Virtual and Technological Architecture Research [AVATAR] group, University of Greenwich, London.
Project images

Melissa Sterry, PhD