McNair Summer Research Program

Faculty Mentor(s)

Daniel Lopez-Perez

Publication Date

Summer 8-11-2025

Disciplines

Environmental Design | Other Architecture | Urban, Community and Regional Planning

Description, Abstract, or Artist's Statement

Architectural design holds a powerful potential in the face of wildfire threats, yet remains underutilized in fire resilience strategies. This study will explore how design, at the level of the house, street, and community, can move beyond code compliance toward holistic protection. Through analysis of principal fire codes such as IWUIC, CBC Chapter 7A, and NFPA 1144, visual diagrams, precedent case studies, and original architecture proposals, the paper proposes a multiscale design framework that expands our understanding of resilience. It argues that while fire codes establish critical baselines, spatial planning, form, and materials must work in concert with social and ecological systems to achieve true resilience. Design is not a luxury or aesthetic exercise, but a necessary tool for survival and community defense in the age of climate change.

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