SUFI

Sustainable Urban
Futures Institute

Sustainable Urban Development of Small Towns

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Ahmed Z. Khan, Darik Z. Wuhib, Teshome Tefara

Professor, ahmed.khan@ulb.be, PhD Students

Collaboration: Luisa Moretto (La Cambre Horta, ULB) Ahmed Z. Khan (ULB), Philippe Bouillard (ULB), Fisseha Weggayehu (Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia), Jan Boagaert (University of Liege, Belgium), Gregory Mahy (University of Liege, Belgium)

Keywords: Integrated Planning, Urban Metabolism, Sustainable Urbanism, Public Spaces, Local Economic Development, Governance, Green Infrastructure, Mobility, Cartography and GIS


Local Capacity Building for Sustainable Urban Development of Small Regional Towns in Ethiopia: the Case of Amdewerk.

The overall objective of this 5 years project is to enhance operational capacities of the stakeholders involved in the processes of urban planning and management, specifically linked to the demographic explosion of isolated towns located in large rural regions in Africa, and in Ethiopia in particular.

The specific objectives include: Through the creation of a state-of-the-art competence centre (ECIP Lab – Emerging Cities integrated Planning Laboratory) based on the active contributions of the 4 PhD students working on the project, local authorities are provided with comprehensive methodologies and tools to develop a strategic plan for small urban areas. Through the creation of a competence centre, local communities are also provided with the necessary information to propose and/or develop their own initiatives and solutions for local sustainable development.

The expected results of the project includes:
1. The scientific capacity of the EiABC is strengthened
2. An Emerging Cities Integrated Plannning lab (ECIP lab) is operational
3. A Planning manual (guidelines) for Emerging cities is drafted

To respond to the lack of planning and research on small towns, the project aims to develop, on the one hand, research capacities within the EiABC and, on the other hand, to create a multidisciplinary planning Laboratory that will operate as an interface between academic researchers, decision- makers for small towns planning and local communities.


So, first of all, in order to strengthen the capacities of the EiABC in relation to research on small towns development, academic Northern and Southern partners will collaborate to supervise 4 PhD theses on the development of emerging cities in Ethiopia. The theses will have a multidisciplinary character, including social, economic, demographic, environmental components, and will thus benefit from the participation of numerous and disciplinary different research units in Belgium and Ethiopia. In Ethiopia, the EiABC will in fact participate through its Chair of Ecosystem Planning and Management, Chair of Urban and Regional Planning and Chair of Environmental Design. On the Belgian side, the partners involved in the project are HABITER research group (Faculty of Architecture) and Chair Sustainable Architecture & Urbanism (BATir department, EPB) of ULB, and the – Biodiversity and Landscape Research Unit of the ULg/GxABT.

Secondly, in order to develop the Centre of Excellence on emerging cities that will play an interface role amongst local stakeholders, the project will support the creation of the ECIP Lab. The Emerging Cities Integrated Planning Lab will be created within the EiABC and will support both academic research (result 1) and the pilot study as well as the drafting of Integrated Development Plan Guidelines on the emerging city of Amdewerk (results 2 and 3). The centre will also play a role of the activities of consultancy developed by the university. We consider that small towns will favourably welcome the ECIP Lab as, within the framework of Growth and Transformation Plan (2011-15). There is an Urban Land Development and Management Policy that specifically targets small towns with a population of less than 20,000. To this effect, the preparation and implementation of sustainable development plans, including the provision of basic social and economic infrastructures and services is one of the core objectives of both the GTP and the centre.

This research is funded by ARES – CCD (Académie de Recherche et Enseignement Supérieur – Commission de la Coopération au Développement)