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Rebuilding New Orleans May be Green, but it’s Not Sustainable

Troy Brown Thursday, 04/08/2010 | Posted by Troy Brown

Blog Tags: green homes, Hurricane, New Orleans

USA Today on April 7 carried an article about green homes being built in New Orleans neighborhoods wiped out by Hurricane Katrina. “More than 500 homes are being built with features such as solar panels, rain-catching cisterns and eco-friendly materials.” Hmmm.

Certainly it’s better that such green features are being included than not, but the long-term wisdom of these developments is questionable. Sustainability isn’t just what and how you build, but where you build. With a strong likelihood that these new homes will be destroyed by a hurricane or flooding in the coming decades, a better choice would be to build elsewhere. The neighborhoods are still largely below sea level, adjacent to the Mississippi with its extensive levees – and oh yeah, the delta’s eroding and Atlantic hurricanes are getting stronger. One category 3 or above storm strikes within 100 nautical miles of the city every decade on average.

Of course no place is completely free of natural disaster risks, and reconstruction of New Orleans is a thorny issue given the need to provide housing to people with few alternatives. But, before extolling the green features of new homes in the area, a look at the broader picture is in order.


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Show more comments (2)
  • Brynn Davis What do you suggest that the people that have lived all their life in New Orleans do?
    08/17/2010
  • Erica Gallant This is a great question. They need to not build where they built before. They need to stretch the city away from the gulf. I know it is beautiful etc. but it isn't beautiful when lives and homes are getting destroyed.
    08/18/2010
  • George Ewbank I think what we "learned" is how to make houses that float or have better anchors. But what better way to raise the bar of building technology then to dare a hurricane and the mighty Mississippi.
    03/09/2011
  • Zarah Taylor Do we really want to dare a hurricane? I would suggest people moving away from the shorelines not move out of New Orleans. I agree, lets improve building but lets build where SAFETY IS THE PRIORITY and NOT jeaopardize lives.
    05/18/2011

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