Philippine Daily Inquirer

Makati project gets villages thinking green

- By Jaymee T. Gamil

THEIR assignment: Come up with the best ideas to make the city green.

In 2011, the Green Urban Design Center (GUDC) at the University of Makati started conducting six-week workshops for officials from the city’s 33 barangays, crash courses which introduced them to the basic concepts of urban planning, sustainabl­e landscape design and public space management, among others.

Two years after the program opened, the Saturday sessions have produced plans and designs worth trying for the citizens of Makati, visions that can be turned into reality with enough funding and political will from their leaders.

According to Violeta Seva, a senior adviser to Mayor Jejomar Erwin Binay, City Hall is considerin­g holding a competitio­n among the barangays within the year—with a P2-million prize that can serve as “seed money” for the winning village to implement the plans developed at GUDC.

Most villages, like San Lorenzo, came up with ideas as simple as setting up rooftop gardens on their barangay halls or horizontal gardens on their walls. Other designs incorporat­ed the use of energy-efficient lighting and appliances.

Officials from Barangay Pitogo suggested putting up a recycling facility, complete with solar panels and rainwater harvesters.

Barangay Cembo proposed a neighborho­od vegetable farm to be called “Oh My Gulay! (OMG)” while Barangay Pio del Pilar suggested having linear parks along the Tripa de Galina.

Barangay Pembo explored the “adaptive reuse” of undergroun­d tunnels found in the area— which was once part of a military reservatio­n—by turning them into tourist attraction­s.

But not all ideas involved building structures. Barangay Lorenzo, for example, proposed the observance of “Meatless Mondays.”

Other villages pushed for environmen­t-friendly transports like electronic and pedal-powered tricycles.

The GUDC was set up so that barangay leaders can make “a shift from (just) being local politician­s to planners of our individual communitie­s,” said Mayor Binay during the presentati­on of the officials’ outputs last year.

Barangay East Rembo chair Artemio Contreras also noted that the GUDC “does not only help improve the physical environmen­t of the barangays, but also initiates change in the residents’ lifestyle.”

The city government implemente­d the program in coordina- tion with the University of the Philippine­s’ School of Urban and Regional Planning Alumni and Friends Foundation Inc.

Makati Department of Environmen­tal Services head Danilo Villas also expressed hope that the ideas cultivated at GUDC would help reduce the city’s greenhouse gas emissions.

The city government has begun drawing up a greenhouse gas inventory based on the power, water and fuel consumptio­n and the amount of solid waste generated by its residents and business establishm­ents.

The inventory has gathered data starting from 2011, showing that government buildings in Makati alone produce 12,000 tons of carbon dioxide annually, Villas said.

“You already know your sources, now you can have the interventi­ons,” he said, citing the main rationale for putting up the GUDC.

 ??  ?? A “GREEN” barangay hall design from one of the GUDC alumni.
A “GREEN” barangay hall design from one of the GUDC alumni.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines