Back to All Events

Architectural well-being and planning in rural-urban communities, and the issues of dialect and language in the transmission of vernacular building knowledge

In the third installment of the Responding to the Climate Crisis: Lessons from the Global South series, Mokolade Johnson of the University of Lagos, a specialist in architectural well-being and planning focusing on rural-urban communities, with a special interest in the transmission of vernacular building knowledge, will speak to architectural well-being and planning in rural-urban communities, and the issues of dialect and language in the transmission of vernacular building knowledge.

Series Background

In the run-up to COP27 (which has been described as the Africa COP) in November, and in collaboration with the Climate Heritage Network (CHN), Historic England’s Building Climate Change Adaptation Team are launching a new and very special webinar series: Responding to the Climate Crisis: Lessons from the Global South.

Our colleagues in the Global South have retained practical knowledge of what a built environment looks like when it is not utterly dependent on fossil fuels for either construction or operation. This is knowledge that we in the Global North have largely lost - especially outside the world of building conservation. Are we missing vital tools that we will need both to limit climate change, and to deal with its effects?

Each webinar will feature an invited specialist from the Global South. Our guest will present their work and then discuss their knowledge and experience with us, as we seek to draw out practical lessons for the Global North. We will be covering a wide range of vital topics, including vernacular architecture as continuing practice (not least its adaptation to a changing climate), the traditional operation of buildings for usability and comfort in extreme weather, and ways of managing change and loss.

This event is part of Climate Wednesdays: Climate Change and Cultural Heritage Webinar Series, hosted by Historic England in collaboration with the Climate Heritage Network. This series provides delegates with an in-depth look at a range of topics related to climate change and cultural heritage presented by international experts in heritage and climate change research, policy and practice.

Previous
Previous
October 20

Seminário Patrimônios e Crise Climática

Next
Next
November 9

The physical elements of vernacular architecture, and their relationship to the prevailing climate