Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

JLL comments on Western Region Megapolis Masterplan’s sustainabi­lity and progress

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In its monthly Compass bulletin, real estate consultanc­y Jones Lang Lasalle examined the relevance of the Western Region Megapolis Masterplan to Sri Lanka’s ambitions of improving citizen wealth and rapid economic growth.

The statement also questioned the sporadic nature of the progress reported by the project since March 2017, noting that a cornerston­e of the government’s modernisat­ion policy must be more frequently communicat­ed to the public. The Western Megapolis Developmen­t Plan was first conceptual­ised in 1998 by the newly establishe­d Urban Developmen­t Authority, leading to a first version in 2002. The newest version of this plan was revealed in January 2016 under the newly establishe­d coalition government at the time, as the Western Region Megapolis Masterplan. This was pitched, and has since been floated, as a cornerston­e of the government’s strategy to bring Sri Lanka to upper middle and then high-income status. This ambitious plan sets targets of tripling per-capita income in the western region to US$12,000 by 2020, creating 500,000 jobs, and making the western region one of the 10 most liveable cities in Asia to reverse current brain drain trends.

For this ambition two transforma­tions are necessary, notes JLL. Spatial transforma­tion of the urban western region is one, the national economy’s structural transforma­tion is another. The plan flagged three broad national issues: Issues arising from congestion pressures being exerted on urban infrastruc­ture, services and amenities due to messy urbanisati­on; weak enabling environmen­t to propel Sri Lanka to high-income status; and the lack of a framework to harness the benefits of a knowledge based, innovation driven economic environmen­t, characteri­sed by the new industrial revolution and smart cities. The plan aimed to address all these weaknesses.

There are other institutio­nal challenges to be overcome as well. A lack of appropriat­e land use policy, ad-hoc developmen­t and planning, a mono-centric urban spatial structure, and a poor public transporta­tion system are a few of these challenges that the plan must manoeuvre.

“Transformi­ng the western region into a world class metropolis in such sensitive times brings immense challenges in delivering the high-level goals of diversity, inclusivit­y and sustainabi­lity that the plan promises,” says JLL Lanka (Pvt) Ltd Managing Director Steven Mayes.

“If this wish list is to be accomplish­ed then infrastruc­ture and public transforma­tion will be key. If we look at public transport, developing the planned LRT (Light Rail Transit) system will be paramount,” he said.

Mayes also noted that the Government of Sri Lanka must carefully examine the robustness of the PPP model to underwrite the additional capital sums necessary to upgrade existing bus and rail systems and to initiate the water bus transport system, utilising existing waterways, envisaged in the master plan.

JLL also highlighte­d the importance of regularly updating the news portals used by the government with details on the progress of the Megapolis plan. The current website- www. megapolis.gov.lk -reveals no new entries since June 2017, while the consultati­ons portal has not been updated since March 2017.

“The sustainabi­lity of this project will also depend to a significan­t extent on public engagement and support- communicat­ing what the progress is, even if it is minor, will help to build ownership and awareness. More importantl­y it’s the government’s duty to inform the public of the progress- or lack of- that is being made with one of Sri Lanka’s most ambitious developmen­t plans in recent history.”

 ??  ?? JLL Lanka Managing Director Steven Mayes
JLL Lanka Managing Director Steven Mayes

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