In the aftermath of a disaster, housing is both the physical artefact provided by a disaster reconstruction housing supply network, as well as an integral part of the affected community and its resilience. The paper studies the reconstruction in the aftermath of the Valparaíso fire of 2014 in order to shed light on how a disaster reconstruction housing supply network contributes to the resilience of a disaster-affected community. It describes the housing reconstruction supply network for both the formal and informal settlements of Valparaíso and highlights how vulnerability and resilience do not lie at the opposite ends of the scale.