Urban monitoring planning standard
Introduction
An irregular settlement, invasion neighborhood or substandard housing is a place where a person or a community is established that is outside the norms established by the authorities in charge of urban planning.[1].
Irregular establishments are generally settlements with high population densities that encompass communities or individuals housed in self-built housing under poor habitability conditions, especially in terms of access to health services. They are formed by spontaneous occupations of land, public or private, without legal recognition, expanding the edges of cities on marginal lands that are regularly on the limits of urban areas, or on lands with high risks for the homes settled there (high slopes, unstable lands, flood-prone areas on the banks of rivers and streams).
Typically they are the product of the urgent need to obtain housing in urban communities with limited economic resources, or of migrants arriving from rural areas, pushed to abandon their lands for multiple reasons, and as there are generally no policies that enable these people to legally acquire decent housing.
Characteristics
Illegal settlements are characterized by certain common conditions:
• - Homes built in high-risk areas: edges of rivers, lagoons, mountains, exposed to floods and landslides.
• - Homes with limited access to services such as drinking water, gas for heating, electricity, cooking and sewage network (sewer or drainage).
• - Difficult access to housing since frequently there are no consolidated access roads, and the few that exist are sidewalks with many holes.
• - Multiplicity of economic conditions and in the same neighborhood.
• - Access difficulties for ambulances, firefighters and police in different events.
• - Homes built with material obtained from garbage: cardboard, plastic, paper.
• - Poor protection for cold, wind, sand, etc.
The emergence of illegal settlements has several causes, one of the main ones is the little force that local and regional governments dedicate to the issue of territorial planning, which generally do not have valid proposals to offer housing solutions to low-income populations and migrants who continually arrive from rural areas to enlarge the peri-urban cordons. These areas are characterized by having a very rapid level of development, unstructured and unplanned.