The 7.8 and 7.5 magnitude earthquakes that hit Southeastern Turkey and Syria on February 6, 2023, took an estimated 60,000 lives. Entire neighborhoods across 11 provinces were destroyed in cities such as Kahramanmaraş, Adiyaman, and Antakya, with more than 2 million people displaced and 500,000 collapsed or severely damaged buildings. The humanitarian crisis presented urgent aid and disaster relief challenges as well as concerns for long-term, sustainable, and resilient rebuilding efforts.

Turkey and Syria After the Earthquakes is a series of panel discussions curated by CARRRE, a collective of U.S.-based architects and academics with deep ties to Turkey, aiming to amplify awareness among a global audience regarding the catastrophic repercussions of these earthquakes and to provide agency to architects, planners, engineers, municipalities, and builders on the ground through the sharing of professional expertise and long-term rebuilding strategies.

This fourth panel, “Long-Term Recovery Building Back Better (II),” examines challenges and opportunities that arise in connection with the long-term planning initiatives and resilient rebuilding communities in post-earthquake areas.

Cover Image: Ingrid Woudwijk; Adjacent Panel Image: ACHA

Turkey and Syria after the Earthquakes

Panel 4: Long-Term Recovery: Building Back Better (II)

Ayşegül Askan Gündoğan

Speakers

Karim Elgendy

Yasuaki Onoda

Ülge Uğurlu

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Panel 3: Long-Term Recovery: Building Back Better (I)

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Panel 5: Hatay Planning Center Report