The Scotsman

We must ensure our infrastruc­ture is fit for purpose

A ‘resiliency audit’ would allow us to take a holistic view of areas of weakness,

- says Hannah Smith

The way we live our lives and design our communitie­s will need to change radically if we are to ensure we have a green post-covid recovery, that we reach net zero carbon targets and we improve health and wellbeing.

It will require new ways of working to achieve the ‘new normal’ that embeds resilience into how our buildings, infrastruc­ture, landscape, cities, towns, villages and neighbourh­oods function and develop overtime. Decisions made by the next Scottish Parliament­and scottish government will have a key role to play in this.

That is why I was delighted to attend the recent cross-party group on architectu­re and the Built Environmen­t to talk about the ‘one big idea’ that would provide transforma­tional change.

I was joined by five other built environmen­t profession­al bodies – the Royal Town Planning Institute Scotland, Royal Incorporat­ion of Architects in Scotland, Royal Institutio­n of Chartered Surveyors in Scotland, Built Environmen­t Forum Scotland and Landscape Institute Scotland – each of whom presented their idea for transforma­tional change. Ahead of the meeting the groups issued a joint statement calling on the next Scottish Government to better co-ordinate legislatio­n, strategies and funding so its vision of a sustainabl­e, resilient and inclusive future can be achieved.

As profession­al bodies, we believe that there must be a shift from overlappin­g and disjointed strategies to policy making that is complement­ary and syn er g is ed, andf roman opportunis­tic, reactive approach to developmen­t to a planned, proactive approach.

One such way we can work pro actively and in synergy is by coming together to conduct a‘ resiliency audit’ of our infrastruc­ture–the‘ one idea’ ice scotland brought to the table.

Extreme weather means that much of our infrastruc­ture is facing pressures it simply wasn’t designed to withstand. A resiliency audit would allow us to take a holistic view of areas of weakness in our infrastruc­ture landscape, and map those against areas of biggest opportunit­y.

We need to break out of the current siloed way of thinking and bring together the public, private and third sectors along with profession­al bodies and academia to consider the big picture of Scotland’s infrastruc­ture.

In our ‘State of the Nation 2020: Climate Ready Infrastruc­ture’ report, published in November, our research showed the benefits of the work being proposed had economic, societal and environmen­tal benefits.

This supports the new investment hierarchy proposed in the Scottish Government’ s Infrastruc­ture Investment plan which prioritise­s maintainin­g and enhancing assets over new build. it should also encourage a much more strategic approach to investment so it not only has the biggest impact on Scotland’s infrastruc­ture landscape, but also enables industry to get behind a pipeline of adaptation and enhancemen­t work, invest in new technologi­es and skills and kick-start our economic recovery.

None of these ideas are new. But they are long overdue. We must ensure our infrastruc­ture is fit for purpose – resilient, well maintained, and able to withstand the climate impacts we are seeing – and the time to deliver that is now. Hannah Smith, ICE Scotland Director

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom