Urban sustainability culture plan
Introduction
Urban sustainability is the search for sustainable urban development that does not degrade the environment and provides quality of life to citizens. This concept arises in the Brundtland Report, originally called "Our Common Future", prepared in 1987 for the United Nations by the commission created for this purpose and chaired then by the Norwegian doctor, Gro Harlem Brundtland. It stated that sustainable development makes it possible to "meet the needs of the present without jeopardizing the ability of future generations to meet their own needs." Sustainable development is a philosophy with scientific, economic and political dimensions.
Sustainability is a shared responsibility that requires progressive learning so that all citizens participate in its proper management. This means raising citizens' awareness in relation to sustainability and the environment and changing the many inertias in their behaviour. In most of the reflections and initiatives of the Ministry of Housing and Territorial Planning, the concern appears to control urban expansion, promote the recovery of the city, the sustainable management of resources and waste, the protection of natural and cultural heritage, the improvement of accessibility and transport efficiency, etc. within an integrated approach.
Concept
It is necessary to expand the concept of environmental sustainability, if we want to talk about urban sustainability. Environmental sustainability arises from the growing concern in the international community when considering the links between economic and social development and the immediate effects on the environment, seeking to raise awareness and find a balance between these. Therefore, urban sustainability focuses on designing smart cities that take collaborative measures to grow in an economic, social and environmental way to guarantee competitiveness, reduce poverty and provide a decent space where citizens can develop.
The Compact City generates a more sustainable, environmentally balanced city model, which means building a more livable city. Environmental health becomes the best indicator of the liveability of compact cities. A city with less pollution, with more efficient mobility, with more quality in its public spaces, with lower energy consumption and more integrated into its territorial environment is, at the same time, a more welcoming city. Therefore, talking about urban sustainability is talking about coexistence and comfort; in addition to contributing to the safeguarding of the environment on a global scale.