Deals with landscape design methodically.
Contents
Section one: What happens in a bushfire?
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: The bushfire
Chapter 3: Ignition and destruction of buildings
Chapter 4: Evaluation of vegetation for use in landscaping
Section Two: Designing for bushfire areas
Chapter 5: Design – general
Chapter 6: Landscape design
Chapter 7: Landscape design options
Chapter 8: Building design
Chapter 9: Building design options
Glossary
References and further reading
Sample
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Reviews
" . . . an excellent new publication . . . If I had my way, I would have this book distributed to every household."
Cedric Bryant, Canberra Times 21 Dec 2003
". . . this small paperback contains information that, in the event of a bushfire, may help you save your house, your life or both."
Andrew Seccull, The Age 10 Jan 2004
"Essential reading for anyone living close to the bush, by authors with decades of experience."
Debbie McDonald, Gardening Australia, March 2004
"A clearly set-out, neat little book which gives useful information about bushfires and how to design both buildings and the landscapes around them in fire-prone areas… It would be useful for architects, builders, home owners and landscape architects who are living, working or designing in bushfire-prone areas."
Katrina Curtis and Jennie Curtis, Landscape Australia, February 2006
Readership
Design professionals; architects & landscape architects, garden designers; fire brigades & Country Fire Authorities; municipal planning authorities; home builders/owners & conservation groups
Author Information
Dr G Caird Ramsay has three decades of experience in fire research, consulting and teaching both in Australia and overseas. In 1983 he led a CSIRO team which surveyed the fate of houses in the ‘Ash Wednesday’ fires in Victoria and which laid the basis for modern knowledge on the survival of houses in bushfires. He was the founding Chairman of the Standards Australia Committee writing construction standards for bushfire areas, and led the committee through the writing of two editions of the Standard.
Lisle Rudolph practised as an architect for ten years before becoming a full-time lecturer in Architectural Design at the University of Melbourne. A master’s degree in Landscape Architecture included a final thesis on ‘Bushfire Hazard Reduction by Passive Methods’. The ‘Ash Wednesday’ fires prompted further interest in this field and led to joint work with Caird Ramsay at CSIRO, culminating in the award-winning video ‘Buildings and Bushfires – Improving the Chances of Survival’.
Related Titles
Waterwise House and Garden - A Guide for Sustainable Living
Community Bushfire Safety
Essential Bushfire Safety Tips
Related Categories
Landlinks : Building