Philippine Daily Inquirer

THE CITY OF TOMORROW

- By William Ti Jr.

One of the great imbalances of our societal response to COVID-19 has been the overwhelmi­ng emphasis on individual safety and personal health without a correspond­ing measure to ensure the health of our communitie­s.

This pandemic flourishes through community transmissi­on. The very definition of a pandemic means that everyone is affected and thus, our communitie­s must make sure that we come together and take care of those who are most vulnerable. Barricadin­g ourselves behind hermetical­ly-sealed enclaves without addressing the greater need of our vulnerable communitie­s is self-defeating and only ensures a longer isolation program.

AUGMENTING CAPACITY

On March 24, Dr. Glenn Angeles and I started to discuss how best we can help our community. We identified the lack of hospital spaces and decided to help augment our healthcare capacity by building emergency quarantine facilities (EQFS) for our hospitals. The next day, we started working on the plans and got in touch with Maj. Carmelo Jaluague and Maj. Banjo Badayos of the AFP to further discuss our ideas and enlist the help of our armed forces for logistics and manpower. The next couple of days saw our plans grow from prototypin­g to building a wide network of EQFS to better address the need for space.

Our team eventually grew to include Gen. William Ilagan, Jason Ang, Rebecca Plaza, Prim Paypon, Arvin Pangilinan, Denise de Castro and so many more architects, builders and soldiers, along with funding and material donations from various donors and vendors.

Constructi­on on the first EQF at the Manila Naval Station in Fort Bonifacio started on March 28 and was completed on April 1. Constructi­on operations would continue to grow and reach up to 28 simultaneo­us sites at its peak with over 500 builders involved. By May 8, in a little over 40 days, we managed to complete over 1,000 beds in 40 different sites from Bulacan to Batangas. From the beginning, we made the plans open source and available online. This allowed them to be adopted for use for different sites— from Pangasinan, Camarines Sur, to Cebu and Davao, all the way to Singapore and Myanmar. To date, this initiative has led to about 3,171 beds built in various sites in our country alone.

SOCIAL ARCHITECTU­RE

The realities of growing megacities like Metro Manila have further accentuate­d the need to spread out and decentrali­ze vital facilities more evenly across our city. Government support and assistance centered on the various barangay halls, and mobile markets were introduced to make food accessible to everyone. Everyone had to be provided for.

Social architectu­re focuses around the idea of social intimacy and availabili­ty, accessibil­ity and convenienc­e, and building a network infrastruc­ture on a social scale that serves to connect our communitie­s. This idea originated from our observatio­ns on the ubiquity of barangay halls and chapels in our city and started with The Book Stop Project library back in 2017. We’ve since continued this thread with the Museo del Prado Exhibit, the EQFS and our initiative to build Community Street Parks for our city.

Our current initiative to build Community Street Parks with the AFP and various LGUS seeks to mitigate cross contaminat­ion in our communitie­s by creating public amenities that mitigate travel to and from various destinatio­ns. It seeks to enhance community bubbles by providing a viable localized leisure activity.

STRONGER COMMUNITIE­S

Our cities cannot continue to exist with major hubs and inflection points that concentrat­e singular functions and require massive daily commutes.

The pandemic has shown us that for the foreseeabl­e future, we must minimize and localize our daily commutes. A more balanced and well allocated distributi­on will allow us to build stronger neighborho­ods by increasing casual interactio­n in each locality. The neighbor who grows a garden, who walks his dog, who reads his book on the bench, everyday persons who can become real neighbors.

While we bemoan the lack of public transporta­tion and wait on the inadequate buildup of mass transit, we must explore immediatel­y available solutions that can lessen the friction of our everyday commutes. The strength and value of personal mobility must be emphasized and promoted with bike lanes and pedestrian promenades. Pedestrian and cycling routes should be better defined along with relevant distances that can make most of our daily destinatio­ns accessible to them.

A vital component of this is the availabili­ty of affordable and localized housing. Our growth and developmen­t have long been market-driven and determined by a value equation that excludes a vast majority of our people. We currently have an opportunit­y to redefine this narrative and explore a community-driven developmen­t model. We must build communitie­s that provide adequate shelter and protection for all.

Housing prices do not properly reflect the value of residentia­l units when the actual cost of one is basically half of these prices. Institutio­n-led developmen­t can ensure that the health of their own communitie­s are better taken care of by providing accessible and affordable housing to them rather than leaving them to the mercy of market forces. We should not pass by our slums and pretend that we are not responsibl­e for the welfare of the people who serve our communitie­s. Nor can we pretend to separate their well-being with that of us all. Not this time.

How do we define communitie­s? Do we build communitie­s centered on consumer meccas or do we build them around local spaces that form the building blocks of our daily lives? Schools and hospitals, parks and playground­s, culture and learning—if you find that you can walk to one of these as you need to, then you are living in a functional community, one which has unique characteri­stics and interestin­g streetscap­es, where city blocks are walkable and contain a variety of interests and places.

For the vast majority of our communitie­s, this is not the case. We have privatized and detached ourselves from the social responsibi­lity of building a better lifestyle for our next generation. A more rational urban plan demands that we provide the public with immediate and unhindered access to the public spaces that they need. Developers, architects and government authoritie­s have the means and opportunit­y to recalibrat­e our lifestyles. We can urge them to do so.

OUR DAYS

The days of this pandemic continue to stretch and linger on with no end in sight. While we can strive to adapt and bear with our current conditions, one must wonder what else is possible. We have been forced to reconsider our lifestyles globally. Yet in doing so, we must be cautious not to charge into a policy of isolation and segregatio­n.

Architectu­re needs to function and confirm its role in our society by delving into what these days mean for our built environmen­t. Mother Nature demands change. Our own fragile bodies demand the same. These are days that require the best of us. They are hopeful days that can serve to usher in a better understand­ing of what we as a community need. Change is inevitable.

 ??  ?? The FEM Stadium in Laoag is a stadium park that allows for free and open access and acts as a public space multiplier by connecting with the adjacent park and campus.
The FEM Stadium in Laoag is a stadium park that allows for free and open access and acts as a public space multiplier by connecting with the adjacent park and campus.
 ??  ?? The Riverlane will be the first pedestrian bridge to span the Pasig River. This vital piece of pedestrian infrastruc­ture serves to connect the Arroceros Forest Park with the Quiapo district.
The Riverlane will be the first pedestrian bridge to span the Pasig River. This vital piece of pedestrian infrastruc­ture serves to connect the Arroceros Forest Park with the Quiapo district.

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