Philippine Daily Inquirer

Creating spaces for urban-rural continuum

- HOUSING MATTERS SEC. EDUARDO D. DEL ROSARIO

The country’s population growth rate has been reportedly slowing down over the years, yet it remains one of the fastest in the world at 1.72 percent.

Zooming in, population in urban areas in the Philippine­s has been growing faster compared to rural areas, primarily due to internal migration brought about by economic developmen­t in city centers.

The World Bank’s “Philippine­s Urbanizati­on Review” stated, “the Philippine­s is at a critical juncture in its urbanizati­on process with the number of people living in cities projected to increase by approximat­ely 20 million over the next 20 years. By 2050, it is estimated that close to 102 million Filipinos will live in cities, about double the number of today.”

While massive urbanizati­on is happening, our land, however, is no longer expanding—prodding us to explore ways tow maximize its potential while protecting everything that inhabits it. We must identify, delineate, give structure and function to, and protect our precious spaces to ensure the safety of those living in both cities and rural areas.

‘Creating Spaces’

The Department of Human Settlement­s and Urban Developmen­t (DHSUD) is thus adopting what we call “Creating Spaces” as one of our banner programs under the newly approved 2040 National Housing and Urban Developmen­t Sector Plan. Through this, we aim to provide a large-scale, macro-level perspectiv­e to spatial and sectoral developmen­t through the help of our experts and stakeholde­rs.

Under Creating Spaces, we have identified five vital programs—Metropolit­an Developmen­t Program, Bioregiona­l Developmen­t Program, Transit-Oriented Developmen­t Program, Land Supply Build-Up Program, and National Open, Public and Green Space Network These embody our commitment to address the impact of population growth and human activities on ecosystems. We must manage the growth while developing our actions in a sustainabl­e manner.

Aligned with the Philippine Developmen­t Plan, we will support the track on the current and planned metropolit­an areas for developmen­t. The DHSUD will extend guidance in incorporat­ing strategies that promote linkages among key cities and municipali­ties.

Of course, we must also build on ecosystems or pursue a ridge-to-rift planning approach in crafting the local government units’ Comprehens­ive Land Use Plan. We will explore innovative ways which put premium on natural boundaries such as watershed areas to ensure the alignment of urban developmen­t with environmen­tal stewardshi­p and ecosystems-based advancemen­t.

The Department also sees opportunit­ies in public transly port developmen­t not only in promoting economic activities but in improving environmen­tal quality and social aspects as well. Hence, we will mainstream transit-oriented developmen­t as an inherent component of urban planning.

Given the scarcity of land, we need a multi-pronged program to unlock, recover and allocate land for settlement­s. This requires massive inventory of existing but unutilized or underutili­zed government real properties and taking correspond­ing measures to efficientl­y use them. If needed, acquisitio­n of land for redevelopm­ent is also on the list.

We previously developed the CLUP Guidebook which proved to be useful in defining open spaces for local planning. Building on the concept of open space being used only as forest, buffer/greenbelts, parks, playground­s and other similar uses, we will work on sustainabl­y developing open spaces especially in metropolit­an areas and highProgra­m. urbanized cities.

Judicious land use

As with any other journey, establishi­ng sustainabl­e housing in well-planned communitie­s must start somewhere. For our vision, creating more spaces from what is already in place is a great challenge but the soundest way to take off.

Through the NHUDSP, we have illustrate­d a complete path to lead us to better, greener and smarter human settlement­s and urban systems, but we need places to turn them into a reality. Thus, the story begins by taking advantage of spatial trends and incorporat­ing this in land use planning to ensure socioecono­mic benefits across the urban-rural continuum.

We are now recalibrat­ing our engines of developmen­t. We are rethinking and restructur­ing our processes of designing human settlement­s. With our programs in place, I am confident we are off to a relatively better start.

We are rethinking and restructur­ing our processes of designing human settlement­s

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