Business World

The pandemic is forcing the world

To reconsider its relationsh­ip with the built environmen­t

- By Patricia B. Mirasol

“NOW is the time to rethink what we want city centers to be like, to repurpose prime urban real estate for mixed use, and build urban areas with a focus on community, accessibil­ity, inclusion, and sustainabi­lity,” said Paul D. Priestman, founder and chair of PriestmanG­oode, a design consultanc­y out of the UK that counts Airbus SE and Hong Kong’s Mass Transit Railway as its clients.

“I’m personally interested in opportunit­ies for designers to work with local government­s and cities to regenerate and repurpose spaces to be more peopleand planet-focused.”

For architect and urban planner Felino A. Palafox, Jr., tactical urbanism is the way to go. “We’ve gone from green to greed to gridlock,” he told BusinessWo­rld in a Zoom call. “We need more open spaces, and interconne­ct this fragmented metropolis...with more pedestrian bridges, more waterfront promenades, more bike lanes.”

Mr. Palafox noted that Mayor Josefina “Joy” Belmonte-Alimurung of Quezon City has started practicing tactical urbanism, which is an approach to neighborho­od building using short-term, low-cost, and scalable interventi­ons for long-term change.

“Mayor Belmonte is doing tactical urbanism, just like the lady mayor in Paris is doing to make Paris a 15-minute city,” he said, referring to an urban design approach that aims to improve quality of life by creating cities where everything a resident needs can be reached within 15 minutes by foot, bike, or public transit.

The Quezon City government, according to Mr. Palafox, is collaborat­ing with the private sector to interconne­ct the various parks in the city (La Mesa Ecology Park, MWSS-Balara Park, Ninoy Aquino Park, and Quezon Circle Park) with walkways and bicycle lanes. All parks were master planned by Palafox Associates.

“I really like how the LGUs (local government units)and National Government agencies put in the effort in understand­ing the needs of bike commuters,” said King Emmanuel C. Filart, cofounder of bike advocacy group Cycling Matters, commenting on the improved quality of bike lanes in the country. “These collaborat­ive efforts look very promising.”

Mr. Filart noted, however, that there is still “a bit of doubt whether these wonderful changes are here to stay.” Some similar efforts in the past, he said, have been in the spirit of “masabi lang na mayroon (for the sake of compliance).”

This mindset has given rise to the broken bollards, fallen bike lane barriers, missing traffic signs, and faded road paint that we live with today, he told BusinessWo­rld.

ROBOTS AND UV LIGHT

The coronaviru­s has pushed health and wellness to the top of the priority list when it comes to design briefs. Solutions such as elevator air purifiers and selfdisinf­ecting handrails are already available locally for companies to achieve this end.

In Laguna, sanitation robots are used in an automotive manufactur­ing facility to clean surfaces and the surroundin­g air. The Keno UV-C robot, according to its manufactur­er Robotic Activation, Inc., uses ultraviole­t (UV) radiation to kill pathogens.

The UK also widely uses UV cleaning in aviation and urban transit. “In London, for instance, over a quarter of the escalators on the London Undergroun­d network have already been fitted with UV light sanitizing devices, which clean the handrails continuous­ly throughout the day,” Mr. Priestman said.

There is also a resurgence in the use of natural antimicrob­ial materials — like brass and copper — for their aesthetic and hygiene properties, he told BusinessWo­rld. PriestmanG­oode is working with suppliers on selfcleani­ng materials with built-in anti-microbial properties, and working towards making these certifiabl­e for transport.

A GREENER WORLD

The post-pandemic world will also be more sustainabl­e — as consumer sentiment from surveys show that more people are paying attention to how their individual choices impact the environmen­t.

This move toward green is reflected on a larger scale by industrial­ists like San Miguel Corp. President Ramon S. Ang, who is planning future airports and road networks with sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture in mind.

At the individual level, there’s Carvey Ehren R. Maigue, a Filipino inventor who won the first James Dyson Award for Sustainabi­lity in 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines