Litcius/Paper detail

Toward adaptive infrastructure: the Fifth Discipline

Mikhail Chester, Braden Allenby

2020Sustainable and Resilient Infrastructure18 citationsDOI

Abstract

Modern infrastructure have been a relatively stable force for decades, ensuring that basic and critical services are met, without significantly changing their core designs or management principles. At the dawn of the Anthropocene it appears that accelerating and increasingly uncertain conditions are poised to result in a paradigm shift for infrastructure, where the environments in which they operate are changing faster than the systems themselves. New approaches are needed in the education, governance, and physical structures that constitute infrastructure systems that can respond in pace. Principles of agility and flexibility appear well suited to help guide how we transform the management and design of infrastructure. In changing how we approach infrastructure we will need to respond to increasingly wicked challenges. Infrastructure must become a Fifth Discipline, focused on learning about the rapidly changing environments and demands in which they operate, and agility and flexibility in both governance and technology reconfiguration.

Topics & Concepts

Flexibility (engineering)PaceCorporate governanceControl reconfigurationCritical infrastructureParadigm shiftBusinessComputer scienceProcess managementRisk analysis (engineering)Engineering managementEngineeringComputer securityManagementEconomicsFinanceEmbedded systemGeodesyEpistemologyGeographyPhilosophySoftware System Performance and ReliabilityAdvanced Software Engineering MethodologiesService-Oriented Architecture and Web Services