The wildland-urban interface: why wildfire fatalities seem so prevalent in the U.S.
WASHINGTON — The oceanfront home on Maui’s western shore sits unscathed, family car in the driveway, its pristine red roof and well-tended yard an oasis of hope on a bleak landscape of ash and destruction.
The most enduring image of Hawaii’s wildfire tragedy is, in some ways, symbolic of the modern-day challenge of climate change: ensuring humanity can still thrive in an indiscriminate and unpredictable natural world.
In other ways, however, it is simply not good enough, argued Erica Fischer, a civil engineering professor at Oregon State University and an expert on the intersection between wildland fires and the urban environment.
“From a civil engineering perspective, we can say no, that is not resilience,” Fischer said of the famous Lahaina house.