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Katia Fabbricatti
University of Naples Federico II

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Journal article
Published: 22 December 2020 in VITRUVIO - International Journal of Architectural Technology and Sustainability
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Often in the past, the great disasters (environmental calamities, earthquakes, epidemics) activated unexpressed energies, triggering transformations of the built environment, able to give rise unexpected conditions of economic, cultural and social development. The fragility of settlement systems in the face of unexpected threats brings out the need for a new planning, changing our gaze on the city.The new framework of needs drawn by the pandemic and the renewed sensitivity towards the combination of health – sustainability, rekindle the spotlight on inner areas. These emerged as "reservoirs of resilience", areas to look at, in order to reach an eco-systemic balance.The aim of the paper is to return an experience of adaptive reuse of the Historical Urban Landscape in an inner area of Southern Italy, where the needs of health and safety of the community are integrated with the transmission of the built heritage to future generations. The goal is the promotion of inclusive prosperity scenarios, towards the so-called "new normality".Starting from an in-depth literature review on the cases of pandemics in history and the strategies implemented, the research identifies health security requirements at the scale of the Historical Urban Landscape and design solutions aimed at reactivating lost synergies between communities and places.

ACS Style

Maria Rita Pinto; Serena Viola; Katia Fabbricatti; Maria Giovanna Pacifico. Adaptive reuse process of the Historic Urban Landscape post-Covid-19. The potential of the inner areas for a “new normal”. VITRUVIO - International Journal of Architectural Technology and Sustainability 2020, 5, 87 -105.

AMA Style

Maria Rita Pinto, Serena Viola, Katia Fabbricatti, Maria Giovanna Pacifico. Adaptive reuse process of the Historic Urban Landscape post-Covid-19. The potential of the inner areas for a “new normal”. VITRUVIO - International Journal of Architectural Technology and Sustainability. 2020; 5 (2):87-105.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Maria Rita Pinto; Serena Viola; Katia Fabbricatti; Maria Giovanna Pacifico. 2020. "Adaptive reuse process of the Historic Urban Landscape post-Covid-19. The potential of the inner areas for a “new normal”." VITRUVIO - International Journal of Architectural Technology and Sustainability 5, no. 2: 87-105.

Journal article
Published: 11 November 2020 in City, Territory and Architecture
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The value of cultural heritage and its transmission for “making cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable” is an integral part of the UN Agenda 2030 and the new international policy for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2030. Nonetheless, the role of culture for these important challenges is an issue that current scientific literature on resilience has not yet sufficiently investigated. Starting from the concept of Heritage Community, elaborated in the Council of Europe's Framework Convention on the Value of Cultural Heritage for Society (Framework convention on the value of cultural heritage for society, 2005), along with the hypothesis of its role for Community Resilience, this study elaborates a conceptual framework in which “Heritage Community Resilience” is defined. It is both a target and a process in which cultural heritage supports the building of a community able to prevent, cope with and recover from disturbances and/ or disasters. Through a survey of several case studies on heritage-driven practices in Italian inner peripheral areas, the research aims to define the specific characteristics of Heritage Community Resilience as well as identify any critical actors and variables, strategies and governance mechanisms, which influence both Heritage Community and Community Resilience. It predicts the challenges and highlights the potential that culture and heritage can develop for Community Resilience, towards further perspectives of resilient circular city.

ACS Style

Katia Fabbricatti; Lucie Boissenin; Michele Citoni. Heritage Community Resilience: towards new approaches for urban resilience and sustainability. City, Territory and Architecture 2020, 7, 1 -20.

AMA Style

Katia Fabbricatti, Lucie Boissenin, Michele Citoni. Heritage Community Resilience: towards new approaches for urban resilience and sustainability. City, Territory and Architecture. 2020; 7 (1):1-20.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Katia Fabbricatti; Lucie Boissenin; Michele Citoni. 2020. "Heritage Community Resilience: towards new approaches for urban resilience and sustainability." City, Territory and Architecture 7, no. 1: 1-20.

Conference paper
Published: 01 September 2020 in Blockchain Technology and Innovations in Business Processes
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The internal Italian peripheral areas are characterized by a geomorphological conformation that exposes them to altimetric isolation and seismic hazard. In particular, this last has rarely been the direct cause of the depopulation; the frequent seismic events have, more often, exacerbated mainly socio-economic causes. In some cases, the long-term effects of post-earthquake reconstruction interventions include interesting “resistance/resilience” dynamics. The paper reports the results of the preliminary phase of a research carried out on the case study of Aquilonia, in the pilot area “Upper Irpinia”, involved in the cohesion policy of the National Strategy of Internal Areas (SNAI). The main objective of the research is to highlight the processes, in terms of Heritage Community and Community Resilience, that seismic events, and post-earthquake reconstruction policies, can trigger in Italian internal areas. The first results show that very often the modalities of reconstruction of the heritage destroyed and/or damaged by telluric events that do not take into account psychological and social aspects can affect in the long term the dynamics of communities. At the same time, those traumatic events can stimulate processes of rediscovery of material and immaterial heritage by the community and start cooperation actions towards the construction of Heritage Communities, the reduction of vulnerability components and Community Resilience.

ACS Style

Katia Fabbricatti; Raffaele Amore. Italian Inner Peripheral Areas: Earthquakes and Collaborative Experiences of Heritage Recovery. Blockchain Technology and Innovations in Business Processes 2020, 177 -187.

AMA Style

Katia Fabbricatti, Raffaele Amore. Italian Inner Peripheral Areas: Earthquakes and Collaborative Experiences of Heritage Recovery. Blockchain Technology and Innovations in Business Processes. 2020; ():177-187.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Katia Fabbricatti; Raffaele Amore. 2020. "Italian Inner Peripheral Areas: Earthquakes and Collaborative Experiences of Heritage Recovery." Blockchain Technology and Innovations in Business Processes , no. : 177-187.

Journal article
Published: 19 June 2019 in Sustainability
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The landscape, as an archive of the traces of the history of man and nature, can be considered a holistic indicator of sustainable, inclusive, safe, resilient cities as set out in Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development. The UNESCO Recommendations on Historic Urban Landscape (HUL) reflect it as a dynamic/evolving system that changes over time to meet social needs: it requires to be managed in a sustainable way, not only as a resource to be preserved. The beauty of the landscape is a common element in the development policies of many small-medium European and Italian cities. However, the state of abandonment and decay, the lack of investments, of often emigrated skills are the detractors. The circular economy model applied to the HUL leads to the ability to maximize the value of settlements, activating social, economic and environmental synergies. The research identifies the relationship among Circularity, Productivity and Resilience as an effective key to achieve the goals of Agenda 2030. The methodological approach tested on the case study of Torre Annunziata, Naples has reached a system of resilience performance indicators to express the complex nature of HUL and define a scenario of circular regeneration, based on the recreation of a virtuous circuit between physical, environmental, social, economic systems.

ACS Style

Katia Fabbricatti; Paolo Franco Biancamano. Circular Economy and Resilience Thinking for Historic Urban Landscape Regeneration: The Case of Torre Annunziata, Naples. Sustainability 2019, 11, 3391 .

AMA Style

Katia Fabbricatti, Paolo Franco Biancamano. Circular Economy and Resilience Thinking for Historic Urban Landscape Regeneration: The Case of Torre Annunziata, Naples. Sustainability. 2019; 11 (12):3391.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Katia Fabbricatti; Paolo Franco Biancamano. 2019. "Circular Economy and Resilience Thinking for Historic Urban Landscape Regeneration: The Case of Torre Annunziata, Naples." Sustainability 11, no. 12: 3391.

Conference paper
Published: 17 December 2018 in Proceedings of IFoU 2018: Reframing Urban Resilience Implementation: Aligning Sustainability and Resilience
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The Council of Europe's Framework Convention on the Value of Cultural Heritage for Society, originating from war and anthropogenic violations of cultural heritage, marks a milestone in the transition process towards a social approach to cultural heritage. With the notion of "heritage community", attention shifts from the cultural heritage in itself, towards people, their relationship with the surrounding environment and their active participation in the process of recognizing the values held in it and their transmission to future generations. The value of the cultural heritage and its transmission for "making cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable" and for Disaster Risk Reduction is an integral part of Agenda 2030 of the United Nations. In the European inner peripheries, cultural heritage has peculiarities that distinguish it from core areas. It is affected by extreme global (climate crisis, scarcity of resources, migration, weakening of social capital, etc.) and local risks (depopulation, uncontrolled exploitation of the territory, erosion of cultural capital and identity of places, degradation of the landscape, etc.). This contribution describes a case study in an inner periphery of southern Italy. Here, in the course of few years many community-led practices have been developed, based on the reinterpretation and renewal of the local material culture (workshop related to local craft traditions, international artistic festival based on the reinterpretation of rituals and traditions, tourist events of rediscovering ancient routes, etc.). These actions have reinforced the networking of local actors, triggering some long term processes. In this scenario, a group of researchers, designers, scholars proposes to carry out Resilience Laboratories as places of learning, participation and decision. They must start the process of building a resilient and sustainable landscape and, in the medium to long term, act as permanent support to the traditional tools of planning and management of the territory.

ACS Style

Katia Fabbricatti; Vincenzo Tenore; Michele Citoni; Lucie Boissenin. Community-led practices for triggering long term processes and sustainable resilience strategies. The case of the eastern Irpinia, inner periphery of southern Italy. Proceedings of IFoU 2018: Reframing Urban Resilience Implementation: Aligning Sustainability and Resilience 2018, 1 .

AMA Style

Katia Fabbricatti, Vincenzo Tenore, Michele Citoni, Lucie Boissenin. Community-led practices for triggering long term processes and sustainable resilience strategies. The case of the eastern Irpinia, inner periphery of southern Italy. Proceedings of IFoU 2018: Reframing Urban Resilience Implementation: Aligning Sustainability and Resilience. 2018; ():1.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Katia Fabbricatti; Vincenzo Tenore; Michele Citoni; Lucie Boissenin. 2018. "Community-led practices for triggering long term processes and sustainable resilience strategies. The case of the eastern Irpinia, inner periphery of southern Italy." Proceedings of IFoU 2018: Reframing Urban Resilience Implementation: Aligning Sustainability and Resilience , no. : 1.