Urban opportunity areas
Introduction
The improvement of informal settlements or urbanization of informal settlements is an urban renewal strategy that consists of the demolition of informal neighborhoods of precarious houses to replace them with buildings and urban equipment adapted to current regulations. The main objective of slum upgrading is to improve the low standard of living of slum dwellers. They can be carried out by the government or in cooperation with companies to make way for hotels and other buildings.[1].
Informal settlement upgrading is primarily used for projects inspired by or contracted to Commonwealth Bank and similar agencies. Proponents consider it a necessary and important component of urban development in developing countries.
Many informal settlements lack basic services from local authorities, such as the provision of drinking water, wastewater, sanitation and urban solid waste management.
Many people do not believe that the renewal of informal settlements will be successful as community planners believe that there is no alternative of where these displaced informal settlement dwellers should go. They point out the difficulties in providing the necessary resources, either in a way that is beneficial to the inhabitants or in a way that has long-term effectiveness.
Background and summary
Informal settlements have posed a major challenge for development because they are, by definition, areas where inhabitants lack critical resources and capabilities, such as adequate sanitation, improved water supply, durable housing or adequate living space.[2].
Many governments have tried to find solutions to the problem, and one of the proposed solutions is the upgrading of informal settlements. Neighborhood upgrading is essentially a strategy in which settlement infrastructure is improved, such as providing adequate water and sewage supply to the community. Furthermore, due to the tenuous legal status of informal settlement inhabitants, strategies often include legalizing the right to the land on which informal settlements are built.
The concept of informal settlement upgrading is to eliminate informal settlements completely through demolition carried out by the government or other organizations and companies, since the middle of the century. In fact, almost two-thirds of the population growth that occurred in that time period occurred in urban areas.[3] Not only have we seen the growth of urban populations as a whole, but the world has also seen phenomenal growth with respect to individual cities, including megacities (cities of more than 10 million inhabitants). By 2015, the world will likely have 550 cities with a population greater than one million, an increase of 464 cities since 1950. Currently, only one city (Tokyo) has a population large enough to be considered a "hypercity." However, by 2025, Asia alone could have eleven of these cities.