37 research outputs found

    The connection between slums and COVID-19 cases in Jakarta, Indonesia : a case study of Kapuk Urban Village

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    COVID-19 has spread world-wide, and with multiple health, social, and economic ramifications. These present a formidable challenge for those belonging to vulnerable communities, such as those living in slums. There is now a growing literature urging attention to this challenge. However, few studies have examined the actual lived realities within these areas using direct, observational research, notwithstanding commentary elsewhere that such close attention is necessary to ensure effective action. This study took this approach in relation to a particular case-study, Kapuk Urban Village, in Jakarta, Indonesia. Drawing on an existing schema involving three spatial scales of slum areas (environs, settlement, and object), the research confirms how different built and socio-economic features can exacerbate vulnerability, and COVID-19 transmission. We also add to the body of knowledge by contributing a dimension of ‘ground-level’ research engagement. We conclude by discussing related ideas around ensuring community resilience and effective policy implementation, and recommend an “urban acupuncture” approach to encourage government regulations and actions better tailored to such communities

    Urban Living Futures and Society: People, Culture, Economy & The Built Environment: Research Theme Report: 2020-2022

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    The research theme Urban Living Futures and Society: People, Culture, Economy and the Built Environment is proud to present a summary of its activities for the years 2020-2022. Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, Urban Living Futures and Society has funded twenty pilot research projects and has been a key driver of the new Western Sydney University Urban Transformations Research Centre. This report focuses on the seven different areas of thematic interest for Urban Living Futures and Society, highlighting key issues, future challenges and research projects being undertaken

    Places to Swim: Perspectives Report

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    People love to recreate around, on and in the water. As part of the Department of Planning and Open Spaces Program, Places to Swim provides an opportunity to improve access to natural waterways for recreation across NSW. This report investigates the issues, barriers and benefits associated with opening waterways for recreation. NSW is enriched with a range of beautiful and healthy waterways providing opportunities for people to swim and recreate safely, create places that people can visit, and help build better communities. A key attribute for all swimming sites is ensuring they are safe to use. Recreation involving waterways inherently involves risks, including exposure to waterborne contaminants and the risk of injury and drowning. As new swimming sites are opened the risks need to be identified, monitored, and managed

    Wicked Urban Challenges in Western Sydney: Researchers Respond

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    The purpose of this publication is to provide critical insights and perspectives around how to tackle four of Western Sydney’s wicked urban challenges, and ensure our region is prepared for the future, namely: job/housing imbalances and inadequate infrastructure investment; declining housing affordability; cultural infrastructure disparities; extreme urban heat. Our aim is that this publication continues the debate generated in the online forum, ‘Wicked urban challenges in Western Sydney: researchers respond’, held in October 2021. The event was sponsored by Western Sydney University (WSU). The university is a modern, forward-thinking, research-led university, located at the heart of the Western Sydney region. Boasting 12 campuses (many in CBD locations) and more than 170,000 alumni, 48,000 students and 3,000 staff, the university has 14 Schools with an array of well-designed programs and courses carefully structured to meet the demands of future industry. The event was organised through the University’s Urban Living Futures and Society Research Theme and formed part of the University’s 2021 Research Week, called ‘Bold Research Futures’. This theme had real resonance with what was discussed that day. Over 160 people attended this highly interactive forum, right across the built environment profession and other key professions. The invitation, however, had gone wider, to many people living and working in Western Sydney and beyond. The event brought together our researchers, government, industry, and our local community to challenge conventional policy thinking and offer new ways to solve these four wicked urban challenges in Western Sydney (as outlined above). The remainder of this report provides a summary of four of WSU’s leading urban researchers’ presentations, as delivered on the day. Each of the academics draw from the strategic programs of work being carried out by multi-disciplinary teams across our university. Each brings fresh perspectives and insights to our understanding of the challenges that Western Sydney faces and offers bold policy solutions and initiatives

    Submission to the New South Wales Government's Department of Planning, Industry and Environment regarding the Design and Place State Environmental Planning Policy 2021

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    We are an interdisciplinary team of researchers from Western Sydney University and University of Technology Sydney, and community representatives, advocating for the recognition and inclusion of age and dementia-friendly community design principles in the Design and Place State Environmental Planning Policy (DP SEPP) 2021. Inclusive, enabling, and supportive cities are fundamental to wellbeing, especially in ageing and culturally diverse regions like South Western Sydney. Here, over 16,462 people live with dementia, and this figure will triple to 52,059 within the next 30 years unless there is a medical breakthrough1. This region is also expected to have the highest increase in dementia prevalence in all of NSW by 20501. Many of our cities in New South Wales are grappling with an ageing population and a tsunami of dementia cases with it

    Prioritising Healthy Placemaking after Covid-19 Workshop Outcomes & Practitioner Insights

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    This on-line event is organised in association with the South West Local Health District, Western Sydney Health Alliance, and Healthy Urban Environments Collaboratory. What have we have learnt from living through COVID19 and how do we build back better? How do we deliver placemaking that incorporates the explicit recognition of the need for social, environmental and economic sustainability and puts healthy placemaking at the top of everyone’s priorities

    Despicable Urban Places: Hot Car Parks

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    Cities are warmer than surrounding non-urban areas. Climate models predict that metropolitan centres will become even warmer due to the dual impacts of global warming and densification. However, the outer fringe zones of metropolitan centres will also become warmer as a consequence of urban expansion that requires replacing green and open spaces like pastures or bushland with grey infrastructure such as roads and buildings. Limiting the warming effect of urban expansion is possible. It requires dedicated heat-responsive planning and design strategies being applied systematically and at scale. But where should planners and developers start to effectively reduce urban heat? At-grade car parks are an ideal starting point. They represent the ‘low-hanging fruit’ for urban cooling efforts. While unavoidable today and in the near future, at-grade car parks are predominately unshaded; made from black, heat-retaining asphalt; widespread and fairly uniform; and often large in size. Changes to current designs of at-grade car parks can therefore have a big impact. A number of strategies to effectively reduce surface heat of car parks are commercially available. Cooling car parks not only addresses their status as local heat islands, but it also leads to lower ambient air temperatures in downwind environments. This report documents:   Microclimates across eight car parks and reference sites covered by vegetation. Measurements of surface and air temperatures related to a range of car park surface materials. The cooling effect of shade in car parks. Current design guidelines and policies in Australia related to car parks. Alternative design solutions for cooler car parks. The empirical data and policy analysis are used to develop a set of recommendations for urban heat mitigation that can be applied to new and existing car parks. Because of the common nature of at-grade car parks around the world, the proposed cooling techniques can be applied globally, irrespective of the fact that the underlying case studies and data originated from Sydney

    Building talented worker housing in Shenzhen, China, to sustain place competitiveness

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    In China, economic reforms over the last three decades, have transformed its urban governments so that economic growth takes priority over other policy goals. The purpose of this paper is to explore how talented worker housing policies have emerged within one of China’s first-class cities, namely Shenzhen, to address its affordability problems but also to enhance local economic competitiveness. Whilst Shenzhen is heading in the direction of an international, entrepreneurial city focusing, in particular, on high value-added industry, it needs to attract and retain professional, skilled workers to sustain this growth trajectory. Drawing on the concept of urban entrepreneurialism, the paper examines how talented worker housing policies and procedures have been initiated and implemented in Shenzhen in relation to its economic development strategy and affordable housing programme. The paper suggests that not only is policy delivery proving problematic, but affordability problems remain insurmountable, thus potentially limiting the effectiveness of this particular urban entrepreneurial strategy in supporting place competitiveness

    Reinterpreting the key worker problem within a university town : the case of Cambridge, England

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    The key worker concept was introduced into the English land-use planning system as a means to address the affordability problems of low-to-moderate income public sector workers. Local planners were granted significant discretion to interpret national planning guidance as they see fit, which gives rise to variations in local planning practice. Drawing on new institutionalism as a conceptual framework and Cambridge as a case study, the paper examines how the key worker concept has been translated into local planning policy in the light of local priorities. The paper suggests that Cambridge city planners' interpretation of the key worker concept not only provided an opportunity for the University of Cambridge to articulate its own workers' housing needs, but also shaped planning decisions at Cambridge's north-west urban extension site

    Innovative affordable housing finance delivery model in England

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    The purpose of this chapter is to outline how the UK government framework has changed and how this innovative joint venture works between a local authority and an HA with a particular focus on how the innovation relates to finance. To do so, the chapter draws on the example of Brighton & Hove City Council that has set up a joint venture with Hyde Group Limited in October 2017. This type of joint venture is the first of its kind in England. It acts therefore as a trailblazer and can provide early lessons for other English local authorities keen to adopt this delivery model. There is also considerable transferable relevance to other countries equally interested in exploring this type of innovative funding arrangement as a way to deliver new affordable homes
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