Bangkok Post

BUILDING AN INCLUSIVE CITY, ONE ALLEY AT A TIME

- By Thin Lei Win in Yangon

For years, Yee Lay kept the back door of her ground floor apartment firmly shut to keep out both the stench from the rubbish that other tenants would carelessly throw behind the building and the hordes of rats that fed on it.

Now, standing in the narrow back alley in downtown Yangon, the longtime resident beamed at the scene in front of her. There were colourful wall murals, neatly potted plants, small wooden seats, swings and a bright green and yellow see-saw.

“It’s wonderful to see a backstreet looking like this,” sighed Yee Lay, 55.

The alley’s transforma­tion from a trash-strewn street into a public playground and garden occurred in 2017, spearheade­d by Doh Eain (“Our Home”), a social enterprise determined to make this booming city more liveable.

“Yangon has one of the lowest ratios of public spaces in the region or in the world,” Doh Eain founder Emilie Roell told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in another colourfull­y painted alley behind her office.

“That means children have nowhere to play, the elderly have nowhere quiet to sit outside and there are very few places where people can just come and gather.”

For its latest project, last June Doh Eain opened a community playground and park in Yankin, a Yangon suburb, on an abandoned plot that was fast becoming another garbage dump.

From Kenya to Colombia, Spain to Singapore, urban planners, businesses and citizens are creating green, open spaces in fast-growing cities to foster community spirit and tackle rising pollution and cramped living spaces.

With more than half the world’s population living in cities, it is

crucial for urban areas to be inclusive and sustainabl­e.

“It’s particular­ly important for poor people because they don’t necessaril­y have the opportunit­ies to pursue private recreation spaces,” said Robin King, director of the Sustainabl­e Cities programme at the World Resources Institute in Washington.

Roell shares the same concern, saying privately owned playground­s and spaces that charge families to use them have been popping up around Yangon.

“Some of the wealthier children can afford to play there but a lot of the poor children, they need to go miles in order to have a nice playground or they don’t get to go outside so much,” she said.

A study by the local non-profit group Another Developmen­t found that between 1990 and 2014, the population of Yangon, nearly doubled to more than 5 million. But the amount of green space per person declined by nearly 40% to about 0.4 square metres.

This is much lower than other densely packed Southeast Asian cities such as Jakarta and Bangkok, both of which have about seven square metres per person.

For Roell, an anthropolo­gist by training, her mission to open more green space in Yangon started as a side project after she moved to the city in 2013 to work for the United Nations.

Helping a friend renovate his apartment got her involved in heritage restoratio­n and converting a small alley near her home into a garden led to more projects.

When Roell and a few friends organised some activities with the neighbourh­ood children, “a discussion started to emerge about how people should be taking more responsibi­lity over their waste and how they haven’t got enough public spaces”, she said.

“It seemed to sort of reawaken a sense of ownership and engagement

… and neighbourh­oods started coming to us.”

By 2017, they had formed Doh Eain, an architectu­ral and design practice that now has more than 30 staff and multiple commercial and non-profit projects to turn neglected spots around Yangon into green oases.

Yangon has a hectic downtown full of grand colonial buildings, some of which have been given new life as hotels, bars and restaurant­s.

But the alleys, many of which lie behind garishly painted blocks that rose in the 1980s and 1990s amid a constructi­on boom, are often used as rubbish dumps.

Under the law, the Yangon City Developmen­t Committee (YCDC)

is supposed to collect garbage only from designated bins and spaces, said Zaw Win Naing, deputy director of the Pollution Control and Cleansing Department.

However, a 2016 directive tasked his department with a one-off cleaning of back streets in six townships. This is now completed and the YCDC is expanding the drive to other neighbourh­oods, he added.

The backstreet­s that Doh Eain has upgraded — eight so far, with funds coming from crowdsourc­ing and donations — are now attraction­s for tourists wanting to see the city beyond the glossy brochures and locals in search of perfect selfie spots.

At the same time, other community groups such as Clean Yangon are advocating the importance of keeping the streets free of trash.

The Clean Yangon campaign, which was launched in 2017 and now includes nearly 60 local organisati­ons, organises a monthly event where volunteers pick up litter in busy public spaces.

Still, maintainin­g these spaces is a continuous challenge in a city where the mould-inducing monsoon season takes up half the year and few households have the resources for expensive brickwork cleaning.

“One really important part is the community ownership,” said Roell of Doh Eain, explaining that the group asks neighbours and building owners to pay part of the cost of transformi­ng their spaces and take on some of the responsibi­lity for maintenanc­e.

For Kyaw Zin Myint, the shared ownership of the alleyway outside his apartment, which Doh Eain turned into an urban farm filled with medicinal and edible plants, came with a strengthen­ed sense of community.

One of the walls on his street bore a poem written by former political prisoner Nay Phone Latt, now a member of Yangon’s regional parliament, to commemorat­e the day the cleaned up alley was reopened two years ago.

“This small street was not opened by the cutting of ribbons, but by cutting the metal chains that locked our hearts,” it read.

“Before, there was nowhere to put your feet down because of the garbage, dirt and rats. Sewage was leaking too. It was horrible,” Kyaw Zin Myint said.

“Now, if it’s hot inside, we can come out and rest in the shade here. During school holidays, kids can play here.”

 ??  ?? Visitors take pictures at one of the Yangon back alleys that have been upgraded with the help of Doh Eain, a social enterprise dedicated to architectu­re and design.
Visitors take pictures at one of the Yangon back alleys that have been upgraded with the help of Doh Eain, a social enterprise dedicated to architectu­re and design.
 ??  ?? Children play at a public park and playground in Yankin, a suburb of Yangon, which has been designed with the help of a group of young girls.
Children play at a public park and playground in Yankin, a suburb of Yangon, which has been designed with the help of a group of young girls.

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