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EIVP was originally set up in 1959 to train public-sector engineers for the City of Paris. It then expanded to train "civilian" engineers in 1986. Since that time, EIVP has trained over 1000 engineers, of which 60% now work for the City of Paris, 15% in local municipalities, 15% in public-private enterprises, and 10% in the private sector (essentially services).
The City of Paris is trying to improve its flood risk management and the authorities require EIVP to develop partnerships and expertise abroad to exchange experience on risk management and city resilience: scientists of EIVP are already involved in several risk management and city resilience research programs. A research axe has been designed to improve urban resilience.
Urban Resilience
Risk Management
Critical Infrastructure
Spatial Decision Support Systems
Risk Governance
Environment & Pollution
ReLeV
RGC4
Resilis
FloodproBE
FloodResilienCity
Paris Résiliente
Joaquin
www.relev.cerema.fr
www.rgc4.wordpress.com
www.resilis.fr
www.floodprobe.eu
www.floodresiliencity.eu
www.joaquin.eu
Involvement in research transfer for example with the City of Paris and the Paris Region
Resilience assessment of the built environment
Systemic approaches
Development of trainings for the public, elected people and engineers, architects & urban planners
Integration of urban complexity to assess vulnerability, performance and resilience
Spatial Decision Support Systems design for all urban stakeholders at different timescale (before, during, after, reconstruction)
allows stakeholders to inform the public about their work on DRR. The SFVC online platform is a useful toolto know who is doing what and where for the implementation of the Sendai Framework, which could foster potential collaboration among stakeholders. All stakeholders (private sector, civil society organizations, academia, media, local governments, etc.) working on DRR can submit their commitments and report on their progress and deliverables.