Rethinking Fortification
First, we are managing risk within reasonable costs and means while living a normal life. If you imagine something to hold off an angry mob indefinitely or that will allow you to defy the US government then you need to come out of fantasyland or have a Bill Gates budget to play with. Here are some more practical possibilities:
Privacy architecture: Building design embedded with the idea of promoting privacy, adjusted to the surrounding environment, which today includes thwarting advocates of a panopticon society. You want a structure that breaks clear fields of vision from the outside to the interior. Overhangs, angled exterior surfaces, material surface to reflect heat and light, ornaments/catwalks/netting and landscaping to break up spatial fields. Perhaps layered walls of different materials to diffuse or mislead spectral/thermal imaging. This could be incorporated in public spaces in neighborhoods or campuses improving both aesthetics as well as privacy.
Underground: Increasing useful space by building down to sub-basement level gives you more possible points of egress, protection from surveillance technologies, storage and living quarters while concealing the true extent of your property from street level view. Best of all, it usually does not count toward your property tax assessment. Substreet complexes, like the system at Disneyworld, could easily planned into the development stage of residential and commercial construction.
Unobtrusive but Unconventional: Attracting large amounts of attention is helpful in commerce or branding but generally disadvantageous to security. A home should be designed to frustrate opportunistic predators and delay determined ones with the most interesting elements reserved for the interior and (if possible) the rear with the street view presenting a target that is visually more bland than adjacent structures and also unattractive for forced entry. Windows should be treated to make it more difficult to see in or observe when residents are home vice away.
Defensive Security: This is something to consider individually and cooperatively. I once lived in a house in a town with a modestly high crime rate but never had a problem because the house was in a cul-de-sac with a wide oblong court and a long bottleneck entry. The neighbors knew one another and it was impossible (unlike on a conventional street) to not notice a strange car or pedestrian as every home faced the court. Aside from alarm systems, simple things like better quality doors and locks buys you time to react. If multilevel, you should have at least two ways to escape from an upper floor (when I designed my second home, there were three) which also increases the interior complexity for an unfamiliar intruder. First floor windows should be out of easy reach from ground level.
Manage your Connectivity: Aside from normal cybersecurity precautions, you might consider managing, blocking or at least being aware of your geolocational activity by being selective about tracking devices (like smart phones) and your exposure to “the internet of things”. Do you really need to hook your fridge up to the internet or pay for everything with a debit card?
Fortification is largely about thinking ahead to put objects and systems between yourself and the world.
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Heph:
August 14th, 2012 at 12:07 pm
Trees as well as Bushes can help against drones and surveillance while helping the Micro-climate and increasing Air-quality (as well as the perceived wealth/living standard).
Fortification is a nice idea but one has to wonder if raising the Living standard is on the long run better. Higher standards leave less cause for crime. Higher and better education leave people with more ways and chances to get and create jobs. i could go on.
L. C. Rees:
August 14th, 2012 at 1:23 pm
The fortifications of the future are dirt, trees, telegenic children, and cuddly animals. This will be a significant upgrade from past fortifications made of dirt, trees, telegenic children, and cuddly animals.
cavtrpr:
August 14th, 2012 at 3:57 pm
Heph, we live in an era of limited resources, expanding needs, and even more limited economic opportinities. Its gonna be real hard to increase standards of living for all, if not impossible. there will be winners and losers.
In that environment all economic activity is rightly or wrongly percieved as a zero sum game, for someone to do well someone has to get scewed. Some folks will always do better than others regardless of the tenants of the economic system, even communism has its 1%. Human nature will do the rest: Envy, Anger, Pride, Greed, Lust, Sloth, Gluttony are the handmaidens of revolutions. In a zero sum economy there will be hell to pay.
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Yours Kindly:
August 15th, 2012 at 3:24 pm
Just some thoughts: some of them somewhat unrelated to the main theme of the article, but other ones more on spot.
Firstly, the (partially) unrelated.
There never was something called the “Civil War”. Well, maybe the War of American Secession, the Thirteen Colonies Rebellion, was the real American Civil War, because then, there was two autochthonous parties fighting to impose their political will over the whole of the political body (if we don’t take into account the two colonies which didn’t revolt). In what is usually called the “Civil War” –a pure act of cultural propaganda by the winners– there was, at best, *some elements of civl warfare*, specially because there were some sourthern minorities who didn’t want to separate from their economically and culturally oppressive northern political overlords. But the last time I checked it, Jefferson Davis didn’t want to rule over northern states, sitting in the throne of Washington D. C.
I know that it is not allowed to describe with any accuracy the nature of the rebellious masses in LA or UK. I know. I just simply wanted to note that the reality of it all has not been forgotten. What you got to ask yourself is not how the riots are going to be with an underclass twenty times bigger, but how everything is going to be with european populations three times smaller, ethnically destroyed, culturally castrated, indoctrinated with self-destructing behavioural patterns (diversity! mixing! oh!) and *far* more aged. There will be interesting times, for sure.
And now, the directly related ideas.
Just think about a world where there’s going to be insect-shaped, fly-sized autonomous and swarming drones equipped with every thinkable sensor and weapon. Acuatic, flying and all-terrain. They will even obtain their energy from the surroundings, in a predator, parasitic and opportunistic way. A world with bionic or genetically engineered organic insects controlled from afar. A world plenty of true nanotechnology, not only drones. The only way to escape from surveillance is to negate them your identity and physical location. They mustn’t know who they’re looking for and where is that person. Fortifications simply won’t work.
zen:
August 17th, 2012 at 3:45 am
Hi Yours Kindly,
.
Here, in the Land of Lincoln, it is called “the Civil War”, but others in different regions may prefer “the War between the States”. Most historians do not as history is written by the victors. The northerners were not overlords in the antebellum period, that came later with changes in the postbellum economy and banking system, the South was the wealthiest section of the country until 1861 (with absentee rice planters being the most fabulously rich of all prior to the robber barons).
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The only way to escape from surveillance is to negate them your identity and physical location. They mustn’t know who they’re looking for and where is that person. Fortifications simply won’t work.
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Largely correct, in my view, though they work best if they do not appear to be fortifications – really, they are just a way of buying precious time