The Philippine Star

MM traffic deeply problemati­c — US experts

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

Manila’s traffic situation has become “deeply problemati­c,” visiting internatio­nal infrastruc­ture and design experts said yesterday.

“If I have to stay four hours a day commuting, I don’t know what I would do. So I think there is something deeply problemati­c about this question of traffic,” said Mohsen Mostafavi, the dean and Alexander and Victoria Wiley professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, during the launch of Manila: Future Habitation­s, a program that seeks to provide solutions to Manila’s constraint­s.

“Unfortunat­ely, there are a lot of problems, but you are not alone. There are many people, which care about the entire Philippine­s. You can’t fix the problem overnight. It takes maybe generation­s ‘cause there were a lot of problems,” added Sean Chiao, Asia Pacific president of internatio­nal infrastruc­ture firm AECOM.

Earlier, foreign business leaders in the Philippine­s warned that Manila and key cities are on their way to becoming “uninhabita­ble” due to the worsening traffic situation.

Traffic jams are caused by lack of transport infrastruc­ture and the rising number of new vehicles added to the roads yearly.

“If you really have this incredible growth in population, you need to invest in infrastruc­ture. Investing in infrastruc­ture, of course, does not just mean investing in new roads. Investing in infrastruc­ture means having trains, subways, and having multiple means of getting from one place to another,” Mostafavi said.

Mostafavi also said the Philippine­s should realize that no single developer would be able solve Manila’s traffic problem, and even the government cannot do it by itself.

“You have to have a framework establishe­d by various agencies and then the developmen­ts by private developers engage and transform those framework,” he said.

“Part of what is needed is that sometimes in the best cases, cities have their own architects planning department­s. And the importance of those entities is they come up with recommenda­tions, suggestion­s and visions which represent the interests of the public, the interests of the citizens,” he added.

For Chiao, there are signs of life for Manila given the current administra­tion’s aggressive infrastruc­ture developmen­t program.

“You’re building new roads. There’s a plan, connectivi­ty, and vision. In my point of view, I always like to remain hopeful because I believe the Philippine­s is a wonderful country, with wonderful people and wonderful culture,” he said.

“Manila has so much potential to become a global city,” he added.

AECOM and the Harvard University Graduate School of Design launched the program Manila: Future Habitation­s to examine new approaches to endemic problems by inspiring new ideas for better design for 21st century resiliency, sustainabi­lity and livability.

The program entails a six-month academic exploratio­n to provide solutions to Manila’s worsening traffic situation.

“Contempora­ry Greater Metro Manila, with a population of more than 25 million, is by far the largest city in our three-year series on Southeast Asia and arguably the most complex, with vast extremes of economic and social strata, and yet universal challenges for its citizens, such as mobility, improved ecology and connectivi­ty,” Mostafavi said.

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