Smart Management of the Reconstruction Process of Post-Conflict Cities

Author's Department

Architecture Department

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https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/ARCH-04-2019-0099/full/html

All Authors

Ayman Assem; Sherif Morad Abdelkader Abdelmohsen; Mohamed Ezzeldin

Document Type

Research Article

Publication Title

Archnet-IJAR: International Journal of Architectural Research

Publication Date

10-5-2019

doi

10.1108/ARCH-04-2019-0099

Abstract

Cities lying within conflict zones have continually faced hardships of both war aftermath and long-term sustainable reconstruction. Challenges have surpassed the typical question of recovery from post-conflict trauma, preserving urban heritage and iconic elements of the built environment, to face issues of critical decision making, rebuilding effectiveness and funding mechanisms, leading to time-consuming processes that lack adequate consistent long-term management. Some approaches have explored methods of effective long-term city reconstruction management but have not fully developed comprehensive approaches that alleviate the management of such complex processes. The paper aims to discuss these issues. Design/methodology/approach: The authors devise an approach for the smart management of post-conflict city reconstruction. The authors focus on evaluation, strategic planning, reconstruction projects and implementation. The authors integrate building information modeling and geographic/geospatial information systems in a platform that allows for real-time analysis, reporting, strategic planning and decision making for managing reconstruction operations and projects among involved stakeholders including government agencies, funding organizations, city managers and public participants. Findings: The approach suggested a smart management system for the reconstruction process of post-conflict cities. Implementing this system was shown to provide a multi-objective solution for post-conflict city reconstruction based on its interlinked modules. Research limitations/implications: Results may lack generalizability and require testing on several cases to provide rigorous findings for different case studies. Practical implications: Implications include developing smart management systems for use by city managers and government authorities in post-conflict zones, as well as bottom-up decision making by including participant citizens especially populations in the diaspora. Originality/value: The approach offers an integrated platform that informs city reconstruction decision makers, allowing for strategic planning tools for efficient planning, monitoring tools for continuous management during and after reconstruction, and effective platforms for communication among all stakeholders.

First Page

325

Last Page

343

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