Status : Verified
Personal Name | Sebastian, Don Joseph L. |
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Resource Title | Co-designing communities through the integrated urban development of subdivisions: a case study of Golden City Subdivision, Taytay, Rizal |
Date Issued | May 2024 |
Abstract | The United Nations Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) provides a shared framework of sustainability and is a call to action for all countries to address. One of the goals is SDG 11, entitled “Sustainable Cities and Communities” which emphasizes the creation of inclusive and sustainable urbanization, ensuring universal access to safe, green public spaces, and promoting development planning linkages across government levels and society. Aligned with this is Integrated Urban Development, a conceptual policy that underscores the importance of inclusivity, active participation of stakeholders, and the design of cities and communities for the common good. In the Philippines, the localization and achievement of these targets involve linking national development plans down to regional, municipal, and barangay levels which is the smallest political administrative unit of the Philippines. However, it can be argued that residential subdivisions within barangays should also contribute to achieving these sustainable goals. These private communities undergo urban space transformation that, if left unmanaged and unplanned by the Homeowners and the Homeowners’ Associations (HOA), could adversely affect the residents’ quality of life. This research aims to identify concepts of participatory urban planning that can guide residential subdivisions toward becoming an integrated urban development. Using Golden City Subdivision as a case study, this research proposed the 3 C’s of Co-Designing as a method towards this goal. The results showed that the Taytay LGU aims to follow concepts of pedestrianization, urban renewal, and new urbanism to provide a good quality of life for its people. A visual survey of Golden City Drive, the main road of Golden City Subdivision, showed that establishments and structures have encroached on the public space subdivision. The survey questionnaire results revealed that most homeowners appreciate the establishments’ presence but are disappointe |
Degree Course | Master of Architecture |
Language | English |
Keyword | Community participation methods--Taytay (Rizal); Community development, Urban--Taytay (Rizal) |
Material Type | Thesis/Dissertation |
Category : F - Regular work, i.e., it has no patentable invention or creation, the author does not wish for personal publication, there is no confidential information.
Access Permission : Open Access