Exploring fireproof materials, resistant landscaping, and Ice suppression technology.

The recent wildfires in Los Angeles have devastated neighborhoods like Pacific Palisades, leaving families without homes and communities grappling with how to rebuild.

Climate change has made these fires stronger and more dangerous than ever before.

As these areas recover, one key question stands out: How do we rebuild homes that can better survive future wildfires?

Wildfires are no longer rare, one-off events in California. They’re a growing reality, fueled by hotter temperatures and dry landscapes. Rebuilding the same way we always have means risking the same destruction again. Instead, we need to rethink how homes are built, making them safer and more affordable for everyone.

We know that firefighting drones and massive standalone homes are not practical for huge cities like LA. But we’re challenging the notion that rebuilding needs to take the same shape, style, and materials that it has in the past.

Here we’ve explored a range of new ideas, layouts, and materials for a more fire-resistant home of the future.

Clearly dry areas of Los Angeles won’t have wetland environments, but smarter landscaping and materials can help prevent fires.

Building Homes That Can Stand the Heat

1. Fire-Resistant Materials

Using materials that don’t burn easily is a smart and effective step. Fiber cement siding, stucco, or metal panels can help protect homes from flames. Metal or tile roofs, while slightly more expensive upfront, last longer and can handle extreme heat. Windows made of double-paned or tempered glass are less likely to break from the heat, keeping flames out.

2. Safer Landscaping

The plants and materials around a house are just as important as the house itself. Gravel paths, stone walls, and fire-resistant plants like succulents can slow a fire’s spread. Removing dry brush and creating “defensible space” around homes helps keep flames at a distance.

Exploring how elevation, materials, and layouts can help in making more fire resistant designs.

3. Protecting the Small Details

Many homes catch fire from embers sneaking in through vents or gaps. Simple upgrades like ember-resistant vents and tighter seals can make a big difference. Newer materials like insulated concrete walls are also both fireproof and energy-efficient, giving homeowners extra protection without breaking the bank.

4. Using Water and Solar Power

Homes can be equipped with rooftop sprinklers or water tanks to fight flames if firefighters can’t get there in time. Solar panels can power these systems, even during outages. For those aiming for energy independence, you can power your home with an off-grid solar system to maintain critical functions like water pumps and sprinklers. This setup ensures consistent operation, even in remote areas or during grid failures. Some newer systems use technology to sense heat and turn on sprinklers automatically.

Could a neighborhood pool be a source of fire resistance?

5. Communal Swimming Pool as Wildfire Protection

Could a community pool be a communal fire protection source? Perhaps a large communal swimming pool could be equipped with hoses and sprinkler system to protect a guarded neighborhood area.

Screenshot

6. Planning as a Community

Fire-resistant homes work best when the whole neighborhood is designed for safety. Shared green belts, firebreak zones, and even underground power lines can make a big difference. Local governments and insurance companies could help fund these efforts to make them more affordable.

Entire new neighborhoods will need to be rebuilt.

Keeping Costs Down

Fire-resistant homes don’t have to be expensive. While some features cost more upfront, they save money over time by reducing fire damage and energy bills. Financial aid from the government, insurance discounts, or community programs can also make these upgrades more accessible.

Perhaps swimming pools act as natural water defenses for homes.

A New Kind of Home

The wildfires in Los Angeles remind us that rebuilding means rethinking. Homes of the future need to be strong enough to face fires while staying affordable for everyday people. The tools and ideas already exist—it’s just a matter of putting them into action.

So, what does the fire-resistant home of the future look like? It’s a place designed for safety and built with smart, affordable solutions. By learning from the past and planning for the future, we can rebuild stronger, safer, and smarter homes for everyone.

Use of concrete and ‘moats’ to protect from spreading flames.

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Author

Ben VanderVeen is the founder and editor of Moss & Fog, one of the web’s longest-running visual culture destinations. Since 2009, he’s been finding and framing the most beautiful, surprising, and thought-provoking work in art, architecture, design, and nature — reaching over 325,000 readers each month. He lives in Portland, Oregon.

4 Comments

  1. Pingback: California’s Future Is Burning Before Our Eyes – The Earth Chronicles

  2. I don’t believe that there is a way to have houses that are 100% fire resistant…how much would be spent on this and what would be the point if it wouldn’t be possible for anyone to walk down a street with fires?…would people stay inside these houses and everything outside would burn in the fires?…what the world will have to invest much more seriously in is how to reduce and even stop the presence of fires due to global warming.

  3. Good insight. Cars became a major bottleneck in the recent LA fires. Something to think about when planning.

  4. Michael Mclaughlin

    There were no cars in these house rendering. LA and no cars? Jetson universe?

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