KUALA LUMPUR: Megacities are not the future, and the majority of growth will
come from midsized cities which have a population of between 200,000 and one
million, according to Jonathan Woetzal, chief executive officer of European
Climate Foundation, the Netherlands.
“There is no way of having an
economically-developed city that is ... an [environmental] disaster, and there
is no way of having a fast-growing economy when you have crime on the streets.
Very simply put, rich places are nice places to live in,” said
Woetzal.
Woetzal was speaking at a Kiel Institute session on “Smart Urban
Planning for Megacities” at the Global Economic Symposium 2014 on Sept 8 in
Kuala Lumpur.
“We don’t need planning as much as we need smartness.
‘Supportive multipolar responsive thinking’ supports not just economics but the
environment and [social] equity,” he said.
According to Woetzal, cities
learn from other cities and it ultimately comes down to a dialogue between
cities and city leaders as these are the people who ultimately have to be
accountable for their conversations and ... actions.
“[Allowing for] the
transparency of the information ... provided in dialogue makes that difference,”
he said.
He said more leaders who support environmental, social and
economic goals are what we need as these individuals are ultimately responsible
for our cities.
Woetzal also said instead of planning, principles are
needed, and that includes principles of development such as the need to include
space for growth for the future.
“If we look at all the great cities,
most of the time they are great because they left space for greatness,” he
said.
The urban population is estimated to double and total urban area is
projected to triple by 2050. The conference addressed the challenge of designing
resilient and sustainable cities for such growth, while taking into
consideration environmental and ecological factors, infrastructure development,
implementation of standardisation efforts, and mitigating urban pollution while
promoting the well-being of city dwellers.
“The Asia-Pacific will be
responsible for more than 50% of global GDP (gross domestic product) output, and
at the same time 50% to 60% of the world’s total greenhouse emissions are also
from cities and that number can go up to 80%. We have an important challenge of
balancing growth and sustainability,” said Michelle Gyles-McDonnough, the United
Nations resident coordinator for Malaysia.
“[For transformation], there
must be discussion at the city level where development really concerns people.
To address the many complex development challenges, we need to revisit how to do
integrated and holistic urban development planning, we need to look at the
planning process with much more inclusivity, and one where we see greater
participation.
“We talk about sticking to the plan, but we need cities
and countries to stick to the plan. Cronyism impacts the predictability of these
processes no matter how flexible these plans are. You can set aside space for
growth but we need enforceability of rules and regulations to ensure that the
space is indeed set aside,” said Gyles-McDonnough.
Also present at the
conference was Kuala Lumpur City Hall deputy director-general for planning Datuk
Mahadi Che Ngah, who noted that the current population in Kuala Lumpur stands
at 1.7 million and is estimated to grow to 2.2 million by 2020.
He
highlighted the current figures of three million vehicles entering Kuala Lumpur
on a daily basis, with 1,000 new vehicles being registered daily, causing
traffic congestions.
Mahadi said some of the initiatives adopted included
introducing the integrated mass rapid transit (MRT) to Greater Kuala Lumpur,
improving light rail transit (LRT) services and extending LRT lines to allow
higher ridership, and having new pedestrian networks in the city with a crime
prevention through environmental design (CPTED) concept which has been adopted
by New Zealand.
He said the government is targeting to achieve a 40:60
ratio of the Kuala Lumpur population using public transportation to private
transportation by 2020 from the 20:80 as it stands now.
The two
approaches the government are taking to reach this target are embarking on
having a new ring road around the city with six park-and-ride facilities at the
transit stations, and encouraging high-intensity residential development in the
city to reduce vehicles and encourage more pedestrian network
utilisation.
“There is a life cycle to cities. We talk about Hong Kong
being dense because it is [congested] there. As cities become more prosperous,
people want more space around them so they start to spread out. By 2050, there
will be three times the demand for land area,” says visiting scholar at the
Urbanisation Project of New York Univeristy Stern School of Business John
Pang.
He said cities should ensure that there is land planned ahead of
time and that “arterial roads, the grids and the open spaces that cities need
are set out ahead of time”.
Meanwhile, Roger Dennis, a trustee from
Sensing City, New Zealand believes that it is important to understand how cities
work before they can be improved upon and to do so, gathering data and
information with the use of sensors is needed to help manage cities and form
solutions, using Sensing City as an example.
Albert Ting, the chairman of
CS Technology Corp, Taiwan noted that job creation is the catalyst which
jump-starts urban development, and cities should invest in infrastructure to
jump-start the job creation. He also stated the importance of
education.
The three-day conference jointly organised by the Kiel
Institute for the World Economy and Universiti Teknologi Mara saw 600
participants from five continents discuss solutions to pressing global problems
under the over-arching theme of “Restructuring economies, Transforming
societies”.
This article first appeared in The Edge Financial
Daily, on September 12, 2014.
For
more information on Building and Construction event, please visit www.asiapacificevents.com
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