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writing:deconstruction [2025/11/12 16:10] JacobCoffinWriteswriting:deconstruction [2025/11/12 17:50] (current) JacobCoffinWrites
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 By carefully disassembling these structures and providing the recovered materials to their communities, solarpunk societies can build for a much lower overall cost (both environmentally and in resources harvested from the world) while removing potential toxin or fire threats. And by filling in the buildings' cellarholes and replanting, they can rewild once-developed land, build better habitats, and restore their local ecosystems. By carefully disassembling these structures and providing the recovered materials to their communities, solarpunk societies can build for a much lower overall cost (both environmentally and in resources harvested from the world) while removing potential toxin or fire threats. And by filling in the buildings' cellarholes and replanting, they can rewild once-developed land, build better habitats, and restore their local ecosystems.
  
-deconstruction site will look much like a modern construction site in reverse. Different crews work on the building in stages:+=== The Process === 
 + 
 +How this looks will likely depend on where your setting is in the solarpunk transition. If it's a post-postapocalypse with scarce resources where people are focused on surviving the year and rebuilding better, it'll look a lot more ad-hoc and rushed than a post-scarcity utopia with resources to spare. 
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 +Ideally a solarpunk society is likely to place much more emphasis on including all stakeholders in a decision up front, rather than ramming a project through the way we often see in modern day civic planning. This adds a significant delay at the outset (AKA the cheap part of the process) but once a consensus is found, execution is usually unopposed and much faster.  
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 +The process of identifying buildings suitable for deconstruction, working with any owners/stewards still around, etc will be very circumstantial for your story. 
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 +There's a little more consistency in how the actual work of deconstruction will look. Most deconstruction sites will look much like a modern construction site in reverse. Different crews work on the building in stages:
   * Safety inspectors will review the building and identify potential hazards. This will inform how (or if) subsequent teams perform their work.   * Safety inspectors will review the building and identify potential hazards. This will inform how (or if) subsequent teams perform their work.
-  * A deconstruction site prep team will empty the building, inside and out, of furniture, homegoods, electronics, tools, hardware and other //stuff// left behind onsite. They'll work with their local library networks etc to find homes for the items they take out.  +      * Depending on hazards (such as toxic mold, or asbestos) one or more specialized abatement co-op(s) may be brought in to remove the hazard. 
-      * This stuff will pass through salvage networks that inspect and clean it, so it can be returned safety to use, allowing society to meet its needs without producing new items.+  * A deconstruction site prep team will empty the building, inside and out, of furniture, homegoods, electronics, tools, hardware and other //stuff// left behind onsite. They'll work with their local library networks, free groups, mutual aid networks, etc to find homes for the items they take out.  
 +      * In a more established library economy, this stuff will probably pass through organized salvage networks that inspect and clean it, so it can be returned safety to use, allowing society to meet its needs without producing new items.
   * Construction crews will begin working in reverse order. For a stick-frame building this may involve removing fixtures (sinks, toilets, doors, etc), interior cladding like sheetrock, plumbing and electrical, exterior siding, flooring, roofing, and eventually the frame itself. Once the foundation is the only thing left, it may even be cut up to recover the concrete.   * Construction crews will begin working in reverse order. For a stick-frame building this may involve removing fixtures (sinks, toilets, doors, etc), interior cladding like sheetrock, plumbing and electrical, exterior siding, flooring, roofing, and eventually the frame itself. Once the foundation is the only thing left, it may even be cut up to recover the concrete.