Many of the densest urban areas are already in high flood zones, but the city provides scant incentive for occupants of ordinary blocks to respond to the pressures of climate change.
Dealing specifically with increased frequency of flooding and rising tide level, BLOCK PARTY highlights retrofit opportunities that arise when a city block takes action around shared problems. Through block-wide moves carried out through interventions in voids, rooftops and ground level, building owners can prolong the usability of at-risk spaces while negotiating new uses and relationships.
Differences in resources, risk perception, and attitudes about the future environment produce physical variation. Through a shift in use from permanent to temporary, ground location to roof, the block undergoes a transition in zoning, maintaining its density until…