AdRem

An Integrated Approach for Adaptive Remediation

Abandoned industrial sites are generally characterized by soil and subsoil contamination. The paradigm currently employed for their remediation is “tabula rasa”, i.e., remediation of the entire site before its repurpose. However, this method is not economically, socially, or technologically sustainable: it delays the reuse of large areas, often well-connected to infrastructures, whose reuse may prevent further soil consumption. A possible solution to this problem is the application of adaptive reuse principles. This study, conducted at FULL (Future Urban Legacy Lab) in Politecnico di Torino, presents an interdisciplinary approach to spatialize, visualize, and manage interactions between reclamation and urban design for the transformation of contaminated urban areas. The core is based on a decision support parametric toolkit, named AdRem, developed to compare available remediation techniques and schematic urban design solutions. AdRem uses a 3D modeling inter- face and VPL scripting. Required input data are a geometric description of the site, data on the contamination status, viable remediation techniques, and associated features, and schematic urban design recommendations. A filtering process selects the techniques compatible with the site use foreseen. The output is an optimized remediation and reuse plan that can support an interdisciplinary discussion on possible site regeneration options.

Date

2021

Authors

Valerio Palma, Matteo Robiglio, Tiziana Anna Elisabetta Tosco, Federico Accorsi, Alessandro Casasso, Carlo Bianco, Sarah Cutrì

Category

Paper

Tags

#NonPerformingLegacies #Architecture #Reuse #Engineering #AdaptiveRemediation

Published on

Sustainability. Issue 13 Volume 28

Creative Commons License CC BY

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/