Urban Planning in times of COVID-19 – Resilience and inclusiveness
The world is facing
unprecedented challenges due to the COVID-19 outbreak identified in Wuhan,
Hubei, China, in December 2019. The current crisis is an opportunity to reflect
on how cities are being planned and managed and brings concepts such as
resilience to the top priorities.
Resilience as defined by
the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction “means the ability of a
system, community or society exposed to hazards to resist, absorb, accommodate
to and recover from the effects of the hazard in a timely and efficient manner,
including through the preservation and restoration of its essential basic
structures and functions.”
The major efforts by the
UNDRR to make our cities resilient have focused on the concept of urban
resilience mainly related to climate change adaptation and disaster management,
leaving wider sustainability challenges aside. The UN Sustainable Development
Goals 9 and 11 explicitly identify the role of resilience, while the New Urban
Agenda devotes a specific section on “environmentally sustainable and resilient
urban development”. However, scholars have a different definition of resilience,
separating “general resilience” as the capacity of the system to withstand
shocks and stresses while retaining system properties, from “specific
resilience” as the system’s capacity to cope with a determinate shock or
stressor (Carpenter et al. 2001). The targets and indicators have addressed the
quantitative component but there is a gap in the qualitative input and the need
to provide better guidance. This may include the reframing of the term to
include unsustainable urban metabolism patterns, social inequalities (Chelleri
et al. 2015) and other human hazards, such as pandemics, in order to be
prepared for the upcoming events.
For this matter,
embracing culture as an essential component for resilience, being a brace to
the spheres of sustainability, becomes relevant. We find both, the culture of
resilience and the resilience of culture providing broader perspectives for
cities, citizens and their heritage that can be applied globally. Resilience
must be seen as an integrative process with the social, environmental and
economic components meeting the challenges of social inclusion, the digital
revolution and sustainable development (Turner 2015). This was addressed in the
joint UNESCO-World Bank research on Culture – as the “X Factor” for Building Back
Better after Conflict and Disasters. The mantra of Building Back Better
needs to be all encompassing.
How is this translated into urban
planning?
Taking the experience in China during the Corona Virus outbreak as a reference, we can
understand some of the urban function-spatial problems included during an
epidemic (Kyoung Yeo 2010):
1.
Inadequate medical
facilities: Manifested in insufficient number, uneven
distribution, low capacity, and lack of resources.
2.
Excessive urban
population density: The virus of coronavirus
disease has a strong infectious capacity, an incubation period and
human-to-human transmission. It is more likely to spread in cities with high
population density, as it is more difficult to control population movements,
cut off the virus transmission route, and other urban systems will face greater
pressure after the necessary quarantine is implemented.
3.
Congestion: Caused by disordered city road hierarchy and low level of road
facilities. The urban transportation system is important to ensure the timely
transportation of medical personnel, patients, and various emergency materials
when an epidemic occurs. It is the lifeline of the city during the epidemic
period and its accessibility should be guaranteed first. Being a double-edged
sword with movement being a factor in the spread of the epidemic and essential
to provide medical response.
4.
Insufficient open space: Mainly reflected in the uneven distribution of large open
spaces, the small number of small open spaces, and the small scale. During the
epidemic, the open spaces serve as a temporary storage and patient receiving
spots. Insufficient open space also means that the overall scale of the city’s
treatment is reduced, and the potential for coping with risks is relatively
reduced . The provision of more open and natural spaces not only increases the
capacity of the city to respond during an emergency, but there is also evidence
proving that the conservation and enhancement of green infrastructure can have
multiple benefits for citizens, improving their health and well-being, as well
as reducing pollution levels, cleaner water and risk mitigation (IUCN 2018).
5.
Managing public services: Like medical facilities, other public service facilities have a
small total volume, small scale, and uneven distribution. Some large public
service facilities can be converted into temporary medical facilities under
emergency conditions to ease the pressure of patients’ placement, treatment and
isolation in the city.
6.
Weak public awareness of
the epidemic: Although this point does
not seem to relate to urban function-spatial issues, the lack of understanding
will seriously affect the normal functioning of the city during an emergency.
Lack of public awareness leads to the loss of early response opportunities.
When the epidemic breaks out, without the proper guidance by the public sector
and the media, the public’s tolerance for the crisis will become very low,
enhancing social panic and riots. Providing accurate information in a timely
manner, makes limited public resources play their due role and lessen social
distress.
This case reflects how
resilience may be provided by diversity, natural redundancy, ambiguity and the
dynamic activities of creativity, experimentation and improvisation. It
provides resilience guidance, highlighting the importance of providing
redundant services: multiple areas and buildings for diverse functions
scattered all over, and an environment that enhances creativity, allowing the
citizens to transform and adapt it to their needs (DESURBS 2016). The reality
shows how in most cases these provisions are not implemented due to their
higher maintenance and on the contrary, the public over the private space is
prioritized, demonstrating the prevailing of economic parameters. This mindset
backfires in the long term when a crisis strikes, leaving cities and citizens
powerless, and their capacities to overcome the difficulties reduced. More
importantly, the human and resource effort needed to respond and recover from
the crisis will exponentially increase if no prevention measures are in place.
Diversity of reactive policies and response strategies in containment and
management of the disaster and their application is essential for resilience,
in this case merging the ’herd immunity’ with state intervention.
Identifying the urban
function-spatial problem attributes and overlaying them together with cultural
resource mapping is likely to create a better understanding as to how the
culture of resilience and the resilience of culture may work together. This
will provide better data for managing disaster in identifying high risk
populations together with the community facilities that may provide the
necessary support.
Taking the COVID-19 crisis as an example, on the one hand, the
identified vulnerable groups are the elder, people with serious underlying
medical conditions and people with chronic or respiratory disease. On the
other, the urban function-spatial issues are the aforementioned. How could the
city be prepared and respond to it in a more effective way? Following the
previous recommendations (problem attributes overlaid with cultural mapping), a
possible way forward could be the following:
1.
Identifying gentrified
and gentrifying areas: It is in these
neighbourhoods where old people mostly reside and suffer high levels of
exclusion (McMaster 2018). They are less likely to move from their original
homes, unless the economic situation is critical. Also, due to declining
attendance, buildings and spaces for social bonding shut down, being subject to
change into a private use, and therefore, reducing the community assets during
an emergency.
2.
Identifying heritage
buildings and public services: These spaces fulfil two
main functions, they are an asset for social cohesion, serving as a meeting or information
points during a crisis, as well as being a potential place for medical storage,
temporary shelter or medical centre.
3.
Identifying open and
natural areas: As previously mentioned,
these areas serve as an urban sponge, they provide a healthy space for the
inhabitants on the long run, being in this case key for elder and people with
respiratory illnesses well-being. These areas absorb air pollution and improve
urban environment quality. They also serve as potential areas for response:
shelter, temporary services or supply delivery.
Altogether, these steps
help with the identification of risk areas and existing capacities, providing a
solid baseline when designing the response and contingency plan. Moreover, if a
wider range of risks were taken into consideration and combined in a matrix,
disaster planification could be more effective as some assets and attributes
are common to more than one risk (open areas are essential in case of an
earthquake and during a pandemic). At the urban scale, this approach may
challenge the compact city and its 24/7 life-style, recalling the social agenda
of Le Corbusier in the wake of the urban health of Paris after the Great War.
Are we witnessing a
paradigm shift where the city as we know needs to be redefined to address the
upcoming risks and challenges? Are our cities and institutions prepared for a
future outbreak or crisis? This situation is calling for further reflection on
the city’s design, cultural values and capacities, and the way these can be a
liability or an opportunity in times of crisis. Let’s benefit from the current
state of uncertainty to rethink and redefine our cities.
Courtesy:https://www.heriland.eu/2020/04/03/urban-planning-in-times-of-covid-19-resilience-and-inclusiveness/
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