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Toward Adaptive Infrastructure: Flexibility and Agility in a Non-Stationarity Age

Full metadata

Title
Toward Adaptive Infrastructure: Flexibility and Agility in a Non-Stationarity Age
Description

As technologies rapidly progress, there is growing evidence that our civil infrastructure do not have the capacity to adaptively and reliably deliver services in the face of rapid changes in demand, conditions of service, and environmental conditions. Infrastructure are facing multiple challenges including inflexible physical assets, unstable and insufficient funding, maturation, utilization, increasing interdependencies, climate change, social and environmental awareness, changes in coupled technology systems, lack of transdisciplinary expertise, geopolitical security, and wicked complexity. These challenges are interrelated and several produce non-stationary effects. Successful infrastructure in the twenty-first century will need to be flexible and agile. Drawing from other industries, we provide recommendations for competencies to realize flexibility and agility: roadmapping, focus on software over hardware, resilience-based thinking, compatibility, connectivity, and modularity of components, organic and change-oriented management, and transdisciplinary education. First, we will need to understand how non-technical and technical forces interact to lock in infrastructure, and create path dependencies.

This report has been advanced to a peer-reviewed journal publication:
Mikhail Chester and Braden Allenby, 2008, Toward adaptive infrastructure: flexibility and agility in a non-stationarity age, Sustainable and Resilient Infrastructure, pp. 1-19, DOI: 10.1080/23789689.2017.1416846.

Contributors
  • Chester, Mikhail Vin (Author)
  • Allenby, Braden R. (Author)
  • Arizona State University. School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment (Contributor)
  • Arizona State University. Center for Earth Systems Engineering and Management (Contributor)
Topical Subject
  • Infrastructure (Economics)
Resource Type
Text
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Center for Earth Systems Engineering and Management
Identifier
Identifier Value
ASU-SSEBE-CESEM-2017-RPR-002
Peer-reviewed
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.44743
Collaborating institutions
School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment (SSEBE) / Center for Earth Systems Engineering and Management
System Created
  • 2017-07-10 06:12:33
System Modified
  • 2021-10-28 05:51:51
  •     
  • 4 years 7 months ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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