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and John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

      Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms and licenses issued by the CLA. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside these terms should be sent to the publishers at the undermentioned address:

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      John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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      © ISTE Ltd 2021

      The rights of Hassan Ait Haddou, Dimitri Toubanos and Philippe Villien to be identified as the authors of this work have been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

      Library of Congress Control Number: 2021945501

      British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

      A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library

      ISBN 978-1-78630-716-3

      Introduction

      This book is dedicated to the theme of climate change, an urgent issue in Ecological Transition, particularly for architecture and landscape schools.

      The scientific realities and consequences of this phenomenon are becoming increasingly well-known. It has been established that the mitigation and adaptation of emissions (particularly through the reduction of GHG emissions) directly impacts architecture, urban planning and landscape areas. Climate change must surely be put into relation with other environmental and social crises, depending on the multiple geographical and social situations of the territories involved.

      The research work presented in this multidisciplinary collective work under the direction of Hassan Ait Haddou, Dimitri Toubanos and Philippe Villien aims to contribute to the recognition of the consequences of climate change and raise consciousness about mitigation and adaptation actions. In opposition to “climate skepticism”, the authors find inspiration in action-research, educational innovations and concrete transition practices, embracing different schools of thought. The challenge is to promote educational practices and research on climate change, to provide food for thought and action relying on the diversity of architectural and landscape responses to global warming and extreme episodes.

      These contributions are the result of an international meeting organized by the scientific and educational network “EnsaÉco” and the LIFAM laboratory at ENSA Montpellier, not only combining the knowledge and experiences of “transitioners”, but also making a significant contribution to the development of adaptive actions, thanks to architecture and landscape.

      Truly committed to this task, the scientific and educational network EnsaÉco initiated a series of scientific events around teaching and research on the themes of sustainable development. A series of meetings followed, bringing together the contributions from teachers, researchers and students from all of the ENSA(P) institutions in France, as well as European and internationally renowned scientific personalities.

      Thus, in 2017, in Lyon, the first meetings of the network made it possible to federate the members of the community of teacher-researchers and to raise awareness of plural activities for teaching in architecture and landscape schools1. They resulted in the launch of an “Appeal for the teaching of transition in architecture and landscape schools”, or “Lyon Appeal”2.

      The second meeting of the EnsaÉco network, which took place in 2018 in Nancy3, made it possible to debate a series of measures, called “tilting measures”, for the teaching and research of ecological transition in architecture and landscape schools.

      In 2019, the EnsaÉco network desired to continue this reflection and open up a key question for architecture and landscape schools: that of scientific research, beyond the scope of teaching. It is in this spirit that the third meetings of the network took place in Montpellier, with a strong involvement from the Laboratoire Innovation Formes Architectures Milieux (LIFAM, Laboratory of Innovative Forms in Architectural Environments), the historical laboratory from ENSA Montpellier.

      As a result of these meetings, the EnsaÉco network wished to publish its first scientific work. The challenge of the publication was to promote diverse research projects, enhance knowledge-crossing across researchers, contribute to the development of innovative research and re-establish links between researchers, practitioners and citizens.

      Using architectural, urban and landscape research material, EnsaÉco’s scientific committee identified several challenges of ecological transition in response to climate change. This question has been tackled following three general axes, voluntarily open to all disciplines, covering a variety of issues:

       – The urban dimension: this axis focuses on bioclimatic management in an urban context: the dense city, the urban heat island (UHI), the plants in the city, transportation policies, or rehabilitation standards.

       – The territorial dimension: this axis proposes to shift the focus from the specifically urban question to examine the relationships between the city and the problem of peri-urbanization, particularly exploring the way in which vernacular cultures in rural areas have an heuristic power for the development of architectural models likely to better respond to the challenges of ecological transition. The agricultural question is also key to this axis, as well as the relationship between the territory and the sea.

       – The social dimension: embodying the third pillar of sustainable development, the social dimension is at the heart of paradoxes, contradictions and (geo)political and socio-economic conflicts, which must necessarily be called into question.

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