The Building Regulation for Resilience Program - Resilient Building Regulation in the Caribbean : 360° Resilience Background Paper

The Caribbean region’s exposure to natural disaster and climate events combined with population growth and urban development concentrated in highly risk prone Low Elevation Coastal Zones, leaves homes, people, and significant infrastructure assets highly vulnerable to disaster and climate impacts. C...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Benavidez, Melody Joy
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/833461635276048750/360-Resilience-A-Guide-to-Prepare-the-Caribbean-for-a-New-Generation-of-Shocks-The-Building-Regulation-for-Resilience-Program-Resilient-Building-Regulation-in-the-Caribbean
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36414
id okr-10986-36414
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-364142021-10-30T09:23:42Z The Building Regulation for Resilience Program - Resilient Building Regulation in the Caribbean : 360° Resilience Background Paper Benavidez, Melody Joy BUILDING CODE BUILDING REGULATION CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT HAZARD RISK HURRICANE CLIMATE RESILIENCE CONSTRUCTION QUALITY The Caribbean region’s exposure to natural disaster and climate events combined with population growth and urban development concentrated in highly risk prone Low Elevation Coastal Zones, leaves homes, people, and significant infrastructure assets highly vulnerable to disaster and climate impacts. Compounding this vulnerability is the prevalence of informal building and construction practices in the region. While many countries in the Caribbean have building codes in place, there remains a pervasive gap in the effective application of risk informed land use and adequate implementation and enforcement of building regulations (including building codes), all of which contributes to rising rates of informal, especially among poorer populations. Some of key contributing factors are under resourced regulators, lack of regulatory cooperation among relevant agencies, a lack of public awareness on the significant of compliance with building regulation, inadequate quality infrastructure services (e.g. testing and product certification) and insufficient political support for advancing this agenda. This confluence of factors often results in devastating disaster losses, as have been seen in countries like Dominica and the Bahamas in recent years. In Dominica, the low uptake of improved construction practices, weak enforcement of building codes, and the use of poor-quality construction materials left 90% of the country’s housing stock either partially damaged or destroyed in the aftermath of Hurricanes Irma and Maria in 2017. The damage amounted to US$353 million to the housing sector alone with Hurricane Maria estimated to have cost Dominica 225% of its GDP. The economic and human toll of disasters for the Caribbean is substantial. For some countries the damage exceeds the size of the economy, leaving huge reconstruction needs that can take years to be fully met. Effective building regulations ensure that builders and governments apply safe standards for the siting and construction of buildings so that they can withstand these events, protecting assets, their inhabitants and ultimately economic development. Recent disaster events in the Caribbean serve as a reminder of the urgent need to strengthen building regulation in the Caribbean as a means to reduce the vulnerability of the housing and building stock while increasing human and economic resilience. This note will broadly describe the current status of building regulation in the Caribbean, highlighting the biggest challenges to the implementation and enforcement of building codes, as well as proposing some solutions to overcome them. 2021-10-27T19:37:37Z 2021-10-27T19:37:37Z 2021-10-01 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/833461635276048750/360-Resilience-A-Guide-to-Prepare-the-Caribbean-for-a-New-Generation-of-Shocks-The-Building-Regulation-for-Resilience-Program-Resilient-Building-Regulation-in-the-Caribbean http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36414 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Working Paper Latin America & Caribbean Caribbean
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic BUILDING CODE
BUILDING REGULATION
CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT
HAZARD RISK
HURRICANE
CLIMATE RESILIENCE
CONSTRUCTION QUALITY
spellingShingle BUILDING CODE
BUILDING REGULATION
CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT
HAZARD RISK
HURRICANE
CLIMATE RESILIENCE
CONSTRUCTION QUALITY
Benavidez, Melody Joy
The Building Regulation for Resilience Program - Resilient Building Regulation in the Caribbean : 360° Resilience Background Paper
geographic_facet Latin America & Caribbean
Caribbean
description The Caribbean region’s exposure to natural disaster and climate events combined with population growth and urban development concentrated in highly risk prone Low Elevation Coastal Zones, leaves homes, people, and significant infrastructure assets highly vulnerable to disaster and climate impacts. Compounding this vulnerability is the prevalence of informal building and construction practices in the region. While many countries in the Caribbean have building codes in place, there remains a pervasive gap in the effective application of risk informed land use and adequate implementation and enforcement of building regulations (including building codes), all of which contributes to rising rates of informal, especially among poorer populations. Some of key contributing factors are under resourced regulators, lack of regulatory cooperation among relevant agencies, a lack of public awareness on the significant of compliance with building regulation, inadequate quality infrastructure services (e.g. testing and product certification) and insufficient political support for advancing this agenda. This confluence of factors often results in devastating disaster losses, as have been seen in countries like Dominica and the Bahamas in recent years. In Dominica, the low uptake of improved construction practices, weak enforcement of building codes, and the use of poor-quality construction materials left 90% of the country’s housing stock either partially damaged or destroyed in the aftermath of Hurricanes Irma and Maria in 2017. The damage amounted to US$353 million to the housing sector alone with Hurricane Maria estimated to have cost Dominica 225% of its GDP. The economic and human toll of disasters for the Caribbean is substantial. For some countries the damage exceeds the size of the economy, leaving huge reconstruction needs that can take years to be fully met. Effective building regulations ensure that builders and governments apply safe standards for the siting and construction of buildings so that they can withstand these events, protecting assets, their inhabitants and ultimately economic development. Recent disaster events in the Caribbean serve as a reminder of the urgent need to strengthen building regulation in the Caribbean as a means to reduce the vulnerability of the housing and building stock while increasing human and economic resilience. This note will broadly describe the current status of building regulation in the Caribbean, highlighting the biggest challenges to the implementation and enforcement of building codes, as well as proposing some solutions to overcome them.
format Working Paper
author Benavidez, Melody Joy
author_facet Benavidez, Melody Joy
author_sort Benavidez, Melody Joy
title The Building Regulation for Resilience Program - Resilient Building Regulation in the Caribbean : 360° Resilience Background Paper
title_short The Building Regulation for Resilience Program - Resilient Building Regulation in the Caribbean : 360° Resilience Background Paper
title_full The Building Regulation for Resilience Program - Resilient Building Regulation in the Caribbean : 360° Resilience Background Paper
title_fullStr The Building Regulation for Resilience Program - Resilient Building Regulation in the Caribbean : 360° Resilience Background Paper
title_full_unstemmed The Building Regulation for Resilience Program - Resilient Building Regulation in the Caribbean : 360° Resilience Background Paper
title_sort building regulation for resilience program - resilient building regulation in the caribbean : 360° resilience background paper
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/833461635276048750/360-Resilience-A-Guide-to-Prepare-the-Caribbean-for-a-New-Generation-of-Shocks-The-Building-Regulation-for-Resilience-Program-Resilient-Building-Regulation-in-the-Caribbean
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36414
_version_ 1764485195395760128