Jamaica Gleaner

PM: More commercial, housing projects set for downtown Kgn

Efforts to bolster capital’s shoreline against ravages of climate change to continue

- Judana Murphy/Gleaner Writer judana.murphy@gleanerjm.com

PRIME MINISTER Andrew Holness has announced that there is to be greater investment in the developmen­t of commercial and residentia­l real estate in downtown Kingston.

“We have been speaking with the World Bank and the IFC (Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n) about developing a project for the urban renewal of downtown Kingston and we are very serious about that. We believe that it can be a major catalyst for economic growth in this area,” Holness said during the official handover of the Port Royal Street Coastal Revetment Project on Wednesday.

The one-kilometre project was implemente­d by the Jamaica Social Investment Fund (JSIF) and funded by the World Bank to the tune of $1.3 billion.

The rehabilita­tion project forms part of several i nfrastruct­ure projects of the JSIF’s Disaster Vulnerabil­ity Reduction Project, which seeks to enhance Jamaica’s climate change resilience.

“For the impact to be continuous, we will have to do approximat­ely 20 kilometres from the west – going past the cement factory and going as close as possible to the round-about at the Palisadoes – in order to create a fully protected coastline for downtown Kingston,” Holness said.

JSIF Managing Director Omar Sweeney said the revetment project is the single largest project in the 25-year history of the fund. It included the implementa­tion of one kilometre of composite seawall and armour stone revetment structure, upgrading of drainage features, rehabilita­tion and raising of one kilometre of existing roadway, and installati­on of a boardwalk to improve the site’s aesthetics and promote recreation­al activity along the shoreline.

A fishing beach was also created for fisherfolk in the area who previously berthed their vessels along the shoreline.

“If this interventi­on did not occur, what we see at Hellshire, we would’ve seen the waves at the prison wall,” Sweeney said, highlighti­ng that if the rapid loss seen at the Hellshire beach were to occur downtown, the Tower Street Adult Correction­al Centre could be threatened.

The roads, he noted, have also been rehabilita­ted to National Works Agency specificat­ions of a 10-year life cycle.

STRONGER PENALTIES

People’s National Party caretaker for Kingston Central, I mani Duncan-Price, who represente­d party l eader Mark Golding, commended the Government for the project, which has practical benefits for the community.

She said that the Opposition is in support of an extension as the coastal area is under significan­t pressure and requires proper reinforcem­ent to further protect the communitie­s.

“We would also be supportive of laws to strengthen penalties to companies that have the effluent actually being released into the harbour via the gullies. It is a beautiful boardwalk, where our women and men exercise, but sometimes they complain about the smell ... and I think the time has come to maximise the opportunit­y of this investment to actually drive further developmen­t, with stronger laws for the companies to comply with appropriat­e disposal of their effluent,” Duncan-Price appealed.

Holness agreed that there should be stronger penalties for those who defile the environmen­t.

“As we improve our built environmen­t, we must also concurrent­ly act in decisive and instrument­al ways to protect our natural environmen­t. No one sitting in this audience can feel satisfied that sewage is going into the harbour, apparently untreated,” the prime minister said.

Culture Minister Olivia Grange said that two works of art would be commission­ed along the stretch in keeping with the Jamaica 60 Independen­ce celebratio­ns.

“The project has a practical component as it is not only a project that serves to mitigate the ravages of climate change, but it has created a new blank slate on which the many creatives, street artists, and muralists can express their ideas and vision of the city of Kingston,” Grange said.

 ?? RICARDO MAKYN/CHIEF PHOTO EDITOR ?? Prime Minister Andrew Holness waves to a fisherman out at sea at the official handover ceremony for the Port Royal Revetment project adjacent to the Breezy Castle sports complex on Wednesday. Looking on are Dr Wayne Henry, chairman of the Jamaica Social Investment Fund, and Imani DuncanPric­e, who represente­d the leader of the Opposition.
RICARDO MAKYN/CHIEF PHOTO EDITOR Prime Minister Andrew Holness waves to a fisherman out at sea at the official handover ceremony for the Port Royal Revetment project adjacent to the Breezy Castle sports complex on Wednesday. Looking on are Dr Wayne Henry, chairman of the Jamaica Social Investment Fund, and Imani DuncanPric­e, who represente­d the leader of the Opposition.

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