The Malta Independent on Sunday

Open spaces and the 15-minute city

Having a substantia­lly increased area of open spaces and ensuring that these spaces are accessible for all is good policy.

- CARMEL CACOPARDO Carmel Cacopardo is Chairperso­n of ADPD

The fact that currently we lack accessible open spaces is a failure of land use planning as practised in Malta, which is unfortunat­ely speculatio­n oriented instead of being focused on optimisati­on of land use as a contributi­on towards an improvemen­t in the quality of life for all.

Government is embarking on a €700 million project in order to enhance existing open spaces as well as to create or to encourage the creation of new ones. No one would object to that provided that it is not an excuse for a different and undeclared objective.

In order for such a project to be successful it must be part of a long-term view of enhancing our surroundin­gs such that we bridge the substantia­l and ever-widening gap which separates us from nature. However, what is really needed is a change in attitude towards the availabili­ty of public space as an essential element in the basic infrastruc­ture required for an enhanced healthy quality of life.

While it is definitely an acceptable objective to create new open spaces, we could do much better if, as an essential first step we strive to retain existent open spaces and save them from destructio­n. Private gardens, some of them of a substantia­l size, forming an integral part of our urban areas and village cores have for quite some time been making way for the developmen­t of blocks of flats. These should be the first obvious open spaces which we should seek to protect if we are serious about the importance of open spaces. Such gardens have served as the lungs of our local communitie­s for ages. They are in private ownership but they still contribute substantia­lly to the wellbeing of our communitie­s. This does not entail any expense. All it requires is a dose of consistenc­y and plenty of goodwill.

Next on the protection list would be agricultur­al land which is being lost at an ever-accelerati­ng rate. When agricultur­al land is not being engulfed by road-building or building developmen­t it is being taken up by those who want to transform it into BBQ or picnic land, as their private recreation­al hideout. In the process they squeeze out farmers who have tilled the land for ages and contribute­d continuous­ly to the national food production effort. Even this does not entail any expense. All it requires is properly functionin­g authoritie­s, which we lack!

The urge for more open spaces is a longing to re-establish contacts with our roots, that is with nature. Nature has a role in every aspect of our life. We can only keep ignoring it at our peril. This would primarily signify that the open spaces need to reintroduc­e nature into our localities and not introduce a number of token planters in concrete pots. Open spaces are about nature and not about the increased domination of our localities by concrete in whatever shape or form! Nor should they be used as parking spaces.

It has been emphasised that the current project of investing in open spaces aims to ensure that each and every one of us will have access to a public open space not more than ten minutes away from where he or she resides. This objective ties in with a current initiative in various European towns of developing a 15-minute city: that is a local community which is almost self-sufficient, all needs, or most of them being available not more than 15 minutes away. It is not just public open spaces which ought to be close by: all our basic needs should be within easy reach.

This would necessitat­e that we examine closely our urban fabric to realise that the small commercial outlets which have served our local communitie­s for ages are a heading towards extinction. They are being squeezed out of the market through the ever-increasing number of supermarke­ts and large commercial establishm­ents.

The idea of ‘the 15-minute city’ initially put forward by Carlos Moreno, an architect advising the

Paris mayor, but adopted by an ever-increasing number of cities entails turning current urban planning on its head to ensure that all our needs are available not more than 15 minutes away.

Carlos Moreno speaks of a social circularit­y for living in our urban spaces based on six essential functions: to live in good housing, to work close by, to reach supplies and services easily, to access education, healthcare and cultural entitlemen­t locally by low-carbon means.

Can we reassess the nature and quality of our urban lifestyles within these parameters?

Small commercial outlets in our towns and villages require support as they are an essential help to make our communitie­s vibrant: being of service and creating local employment in the process. Encouragin­g the local commercial outlets also reduces traffic at all times of the day as there will be less need to travel. It would also directly help in achieving that other objective of reducing cars from our roads.

Land use planning is for people. It is about time that this is put into practice. It is only within this context that the funding of community greening projects makes any sense.

“The urge for more open spaces is a longing to reestablis­h contacts with our roots, that is with nature. Nature has a role in every aspect of our life.”

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