case studies Flashcards
1
Q
management if squatter settlement in Sao Paulo
A
- Sao Paulo has the largest slum population in South America
- favelas: squatter settlements/shanty towns , corticos: decaying formal housing, mainly in the inner city
- metropolitan area population: 20 M
- compact urban area
- approx. density 8110/km2 (twice of paris, three times LA)
- income inequality, lack of economic growth, immigration,poverty,lack of affordable housing leads to slum formation
- substandard housing occipies 70% of Sao Paulo’s area (kb 1500 km2)
- 20% of pop (2 M ppl) live in favelas, over 500000 in corticos
- often single rooms, lack electricity and plumbing, rat and cockroach infestations
- more than 60% of pop growth in 1980s absorbed by favelas
- social devision of affluent who live in higher central districts and poor concentrated on floodplains along railways
2
Q
favelas
A
- large number are found in municipal and privately-owned areas:
○ near gullies
○ on floodplains
○ on river banks
○ along railways
○ beside main roads
○ adjacent to industrial areas - changes in public policy in the last 30 years from one of slum removal to one of slum upgrading
- rapid spread of favelas mixed up the pattern of centre/periphery segregation, however public authority constantly removed favelas in areas valued by public property market
- private property owners regaining possession of their land has pushed favelas to the poorest most hazardous areas
3
Q
Heliópolis - the development and improvement of a favela
A
- one of largest areas of slum housing in Latin America
- established from late 1960s
- over 100 000 people live here
- very limited access to facilities
- one library with 300 books for the whole community to the SE of city centre
4
Q
provision of city infrastructure in Manchester, UK
A
- Attempts to solve transport issues by looking at hard and soft engineering methods to solve speed, flow, safety, congestion and pollution
- 120 school buses and 200km of cycle routes would be added to the city
- Metrolink: first city centre light rail in UK, modernised public transport:Opened 1992: Government couldn’t afford, but with huge support, a campaign secured funding
- bus problems: 18 competing companies, only 15% of profits back to local economy, high fares and no uniform payment system (like Oyster cards), poorest areas left unconnected, health crisis from old polluting diesel buses:
- 2017 Bus Regulation Act: gives power to local mayor to bring bus services back into public ownership. Low emission buses could be bought.
- previous attempts in other UK locations led to bus companies suing local authorities.