Using Empathic Design as a Tool for Urban Sustainability in Low-Resource Settings
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Empathic Design as a Support for Social and Cultural Sustainability
3. Learning from Existing Sustainability Models and Three Examples of Affordable Housing
3.1. The Synthesis of Two Existing Sustainability Models
3.1.1. UN Habitat Sustainable Housing for Sustainable Cities
3.1.2. QSAND
3.2. Three Examples of Affordable Housing
3.2.1. Kuisebmond
3.2.2. Chamazi
3.2.3. Quinta Monroy
3.3. Using the Model to Find Relevant Aspects in the Design Process
3.3.1. Environmental Sustainability
3.3.2. Economic Sustainability
3.3.3. Social Sustainability
3.3.4. Cultural Sustainability
4. Discussion: The Potential of Inhabitant Engagement to Reach Social and Cultural Sustainability
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
DIMENSIONS [2,18] | Kuisebmond | Chamazi | Quinta Monroy |
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SOCIAL | |||
Safety Security, trust in neighbors and authority, feeling at home, connections, urban form and form of structure, materials that are durable, accessibility for fire engines and ambulances, taking into considerations healthy materials and construction methods as well as possibilities to reach health care facilities and pharmacies. | The second least densely inhabited country in the world, smaller risk for hazards. The street structure gives access to fire engines, and the materials and form of the houses are rather fire-proof, except the roof structure. Urban arrangement, no units of houses, monotonous urban planning, potentially walls will be constructed for security. | The community is small and have been organized since the beginning. There is a trust between the people. The area is accessible for fire engines and ambulances. Wood is used in the construction of the roofs, which is not fire safe, but otherwise the materials are safe. The courtyards are not walled, but the windows have bars. | The participatory process was striving to create a feeling of belonging among the inhabitants to create safety. The houses are only two floors high and the regular streetscape allows fire engines to pass easily. The materials are fire safe. |
Access, Accessibility, and Inclusivity for all societal levels, ethnical groups, and people with physical disabilities, shared responsibilities, and shared opportunities. | Connected to the access of housing. Vulnerable groups such as unemployed and low-income groups are excluded from the process. Constructed in one floor, but no ramps. | All people in the original scheme had potential access to the houses, but the time span might have made it impossible for some to wait. Constructed in one floor, but no ramps. | The people the area originally was meant for had access to the social housing scheme. The organization among future neighbors allowed them to share responsibilities and opportunities [7]. Stairs, no ramps. |
Interaction and Participation, sense of community, trust in neighbors, form supporting social interaction, connections to neighbors, meaningfulness of the interventions done and decisions taken, feeling of ownership, ownership, learning possibilities. | Weak transparency and slow and unclear decision-making process reduces trust. | The initiative of the project was taken by the community members and it was taken forward through a local NGO that secured the participation of the inhabitants and meaningfulness of the project for them [5]. | The inhabitants were informed of the details, restrictions and constraints during the whole process [7]. The focus was on information and choice within restricted frames [7]. There were learning possibilities for the inhabitants. |
Transparency Trust in system and authorities, information management practices, open access of design. | Transparency in decision-making considered weak as there have been a limited amount of consultations of relevant stakeholders. No good practice evaluation. This reduces trust. | The project was totally transparent during the whole process [4]. | The project was transparent during the whole process and focused particularly on keeping the inhabitants informed of the budget and steps taken [7]. The drawings are shared as open source by the architects and can be used by anybody [51]. |
Empowerment and Capacity-Building Public participation, capacity for self-organization, societal collaboration, community structure. | Shack Dwellers Federation of Namibia offers a community network of savings groups and receives annual funding from the government. Decentralized governance model enables some local participation. | The help of the NGO Center for Community Initiatives and the Federation of the Urban Poor (part of Slum Dwellers International) has helped the community to self-organization [5]. | The architects aimed at building capacity for self-organization of the community [7]. |
Services Areal planning: schools, public services, health care, shops, access to public transport. | Community services available in the area. | The area is not very big and there is a nearby community with schools and shops. Nevertheless, a small market place, an area for agriculture, a community hall, and a bus station was planned into the area. | The area includes only housing, but the inhabitants has the possibility to have income-generating activities in the ground floor. |
Governance | The government addresses the housing challenges in its policies and programs. However, in reality the implementation of these policies has been challenging. | The government did not provide the tenants that were evicted with any support. The project is an offspring of that failure. The project is self-organized and governed with the help of NGOs [5]. | Initiated by a group of architects based on the social housing scheme of Chile. The architects influenced the government to make changes in the scheme for it to accommodate a better structure for social housing. The project was planned accordingly. [7] |
CULTURAL | |||
Cultural Heritage Tangible and intangible, history of place, history of people and activities, capacity-building in a sustainable direction regarding energy use recycling, communal living, place maintenance etc. | Some move from rural areas only to live in the city for some periods of time in the year, work and send money back to their families in urban areas (mainly men). Thus, there is a need for a wider range of options, such as subsidized renting, rent-to-buy schemes to respond to the changing lifestyles. | The community members had a say in the planning of the houses and the houses were done by a local architect [5]. There is a basic form that follows a bit the traditional way of using space, but many aspects are forgotten. There were no structures on the area before. | The people were staying where they lived before. The houses were constructed in the same area [50]. Even if the actual living area changed, the nearby surroundings stayed familiar. |
Adaptability and Choice Possibilities to make personal choices, incremental construction possibilities: if the family grows, the home can grow, if the income grows the home can be updated accordingly. | There is not much space for extensions around the houses. | The area and the houses were designed by a local architect ordered by representatives of the community according to their needs. The design is conventional, except that the houses were made smaller than the common house type. The form does not allow extension nor personal adaption. The area is built incrementally, for one house to finance the next [5]. | The whole scheme has a strong innovation of providing the inhabitants with half a house instead of a too small house [7]. The form leaves space for optional extension of the house. The inhabitants also had the possibility to choose between elements within their house, within the monetary restrictions. |
Diversity and Inclusiveness, mixed use: income, age groups, ethnic, prevention of segregation. | Age groups: pensions provided by the government, inherited unequal pattern of settlement as a result of apartheid policies followed by the colonial government [20,34]. | Anybody within the community had accessibility to the project. There is a diversity of inhabitants, but all are of a fairly low-income class [5]. | As it was a certain group that was moved to the area, they were of a rather similar income level, but a diverse age structure [7]. |
Vernacular building tradition Local forms, resilient techniques, promoting local knowledge, energy efficiency, sustainable resource use. | Building tradition adopted from South Africa. | The form does partly follow local vernacular principles. | The part designed by the architects is contemporary and minimalistic, whereas the potential for extensions leave room for vernacular features. |
Spatial Hierarchy Local use of space and structure, steps from public to private, assisting transition from other forms of housing to more dense options. | Strong urban-rural link (caused by historical factors such as apartheid, food security and employment). Patriarchal society where especially unmarried women are facing insecure tenure. | The traditional way of using space in Swahili culture does not fit very well into the Chamazi planning. | The apartments are designed in a basic manner and the house is in two floors. This does not seem to follow traditional use of space, but the literature does not reveal specific answers to this question. |
Use of Urban Space Tradition of use of outdoor private or shared space. | No courtyards or public spaces. Monotonous structure of the city scape. | How the houses meet the street has a potential to create a traditional street life. There are also elements such as the market place, that might, when the area is fully populated, have an urban life according to the cultural habits. | This project covered only housing. The buildings are placed in rows, there has not been paid particularly attention to use of urban space. |
Cultural and Religious Activities Spaces reserved for religious activities, traditions, and events. | Available and affordable public transportation is important to maintain strong urban-rural linkage between families. Churches or community halls? | There is a plan for a community hall, but no other spaces for cultural or religious activities. | There is nothing that supports cultural or religious activities. |
Symbolism, Colors and Decoration Local attachment, dignity. | Natural stones used for decoration? | Nothing emphasizes locality in the details. | The parts that inhabitants have had the possibility to build themselves, 1/2 house are truly local and reflects the color diversity and personality of both culture and inhabitants. |
Creative Activities Promoting and arranging space for affordable sports and cultural activities, activity areas for children. | Some but are they accessible to all? | There are no areas designated for these kinds of activities in the plan. | The focus is on the housing and these things are not visibly considered. |
Aesthetics and Timelessness Neutral design, not to be outdated within a short time-frame. An aim towards beauty. | The design of the houses is somewhat timeless, but not bound to the local culture or traditions. | The design of the houses is somewhat timeless and neutral and parts of them are bound to local vernacular. | The designed part of the architecture follows a simple and well-planned aesthetics while the colorful varieties of the personal extensions makes it alive and bound to culture [50]. |
ENVIRONMENTAL | |||
Material Efficiency | Materials as basic as Portland cement, steel and construction timber are not locally available and are imported from neighboring countries. This raises building costs and affect the affordability of housing. Banks are reluctant to finance houses using alternative material as they are not considered durable. Small number of suppliers and regulations create barriers. | The houses were built with the minimal amount of materials and the minimum costs. | There has been a focus in the design phase to create measurements according to standard material, not to cause any spare costs and to make it easy for inhabitants to build incrementally and make extensions [7]. |
Low Carbon Footprint Low greenhouse emissions in all parts of the design and during the whole life cycle of the material. | Concrete is not a material with low carbon footprint, nor is steel. | Compressed cement and earth blocks and fiber-cement roof tiles have a rather low carbon footprint. | Concrete is not a material with low carbon footprint, but the economical form of the buildings saves material [53]. |
Life Length Use of durable materials. | Materials are fairly durable, if there are no termites that destroy the timber and if the steel is rust proof and thick enough. | The materials are durable. The roof tiles need maintenance. | The materials are durable. |
Reusability of Materials Use of materials that are bio degradable or that can be recycled if the buildings are turned down. | The wooden parts are biodegradable, and the steel can be reused. The concrete is not possible to reuse. | The materials are reusable, as the interlocking compressed blocks are done without mortar. | The materials of the initial construction are not reusable, but as the extensions can be made of anything, that material can be reusable. |
Use of Recycled Materials Use of materials that are recycled or upcycled. | No recycled materials are used as they are not considered durable [42]. Lack of technology to use local material [6]. | No recycled materials are used. | In the extensions recycled materials can be used [7]. |
Locally Available Materials Transport avoided during the construction phase. | Materials imported from neighboring countries. This raises building costs and affect the affordability of housing. | The bricks are made of local earth with an addition of cement. Wood and cement needed to be transported to site. | The materials were transported to site. |
Resilience Durable construction according to potential natural disasters, e.g., earthquakes, floods or storms, adaptability, and incremental construction possibilities. | The city of Walvis Bay does not have a policy paper or an action plan for climate change. mitigation. No any specific criteria concerning the thermal environment. There are no considerations of potential flooding. | The construction is not done in a very durable way. | The calculations are made with potential earthquakes in mind [7]. |
Energy Efficiency Efficiency in all different stages, construction, and use, e.g., possibilities for energy savings and use of materials and solutions that support cooling or heating, integrating housing to sustainable energy systems. | Using concrete as a construction material is not energy efficient. Apartments tend to overheat during summer time and are extremely cold during winter time. | The materials are rather energy efficient, and the houses have natural ventilation only. | Using concrete is not energy efficient [53]. |
Innovative Solutions for housing-related infrastructure e.g., rainwater harvesting, sewage systems with natural water purification solutions, solar energy, ventilation based on gravity, toilet solutions etc. | Challenges in solar energy provision (sand storms affect to the maintenance of solar panels). There is very little interest in using alternative technologies and local materials in the implementation of the National Housing Enterprise’s activities or the Build Together program. | The sewage system is innovative. | The innovation of providing half a house is brilliant. The house is also measured to fit to common building material sizes, so that the extensions would be as easy and economical to construct as possible [50]. |
Land Use Efficiency of the use of land, density, green areas, protection of bio-diversity. | Inherited unequal pattern of settlement as a result of apartheid policies followed by the colonial government. One floor. Green areas available (availability of water). The area is not densely planned, will add to urban sprawl if the city is growing as fast as predicted. | One family houses are never that an efficient way of using land, adds to urban sprawl, but the split of the normative size of plot makes the site more densely inhabited than regular officially planned areas in Dar es Salaam. There are green areas on part of the plot. | The row-house model is more efficient than one family houses, but only two floors does not make the habitation very dense. |
Urban Mobility Urban sprawl, citizen’s need for transport, promoting low-carbon infrastructure. | In some areas public transportation (bus service) is provided by a private actor (uranium mines). In most cases people use taxis, which are an expensive form of transportation to some and affects to the increase of carbon emissions. Road conditions are generally good. | The area is not close to the city center and as the inhabitants were moved from the port area that was very central, there is commuting. There are buses, not very far from the area. | The buildings are placed in central Iquique. |
Waste Management Promoting recycling and proper management of hazardous waste. | Some activities concerning recycling and proper management of hazardous waste but this is not always consistent. There is a need for awareness raising activities. | There was no particular attention paid to waste management in the design. | Literature does not reveal answers to this question, but the area is central and follows probably the prevailing waste management system of the city. |
Sanitation Preventing hazardous and polluting materials, introducing ecological sanitation systems. | The local authority provides a sewage system network but has sometimes been proved to be insufficient. | There is a natural ecological water cleaning system for the area. | The area is within the existing urban structure and is probably connected to the existing city system. |
ECONOMIC | |||
Affordability Balanced housing markets, system for finance, mixed buying, and tenure options. | Houses are mainly offered for a certain income group (unbalanced housing markets). | The houses are planned to be as cheap as possible. The sizes of plots were diminished, to keep the price of purchase lower. There is no tenure option but there is a self-organized system for finance. Done with financial support for the purchase of land [4]. | The pricing is according to Chilean social housing standards, but instead of getting a too small house the inhabitants get half a bigger house [7]. |
Economic Inclusiveness Mixed income options, and inhabitants. | Houses are mainly offered for a certain income group. | People with any income will have the possibility to purchase a house, but there is no variety in size or quality. | People with any income will have the possibility to purchase a house but will most probably be bound to a loan. There is no variety in size or quality in the initial state. Inhabitants have the possibility to ameliorate their apartment and make it bigger [49]. |
Capacity-Building Job creation & skills development during the whole process, planning, construction, and maintenance. | Capacity for skills development is weak. BT project offers some form of participation in construction work. Private sector financing is usually limited to the high and middle-income sector [42]. | The community participated actively in the whole process of the housing project from the initial stage to realization. There was a lot of capacity-building included. | The long-term and thorough participatory design for this project allowed a lot of capacity-building. The aim was also for the community to get organized during the process, for the future maintenance of the housing area [7]. |
Income-Generating Activities Spaces for income-generating activities mixed with housing and possibilities domestic economic activities and enterprise. | No spaces for income-generating activities in the housing areas. | A market place was planned as part of the area. | It is only a housing area, but the inhabitants have the choice to have economic activities in the ground floor facing the streets. |
Socio-economic Organizing Accessibility for anybody, arrangements for credit, lobbying activity. | Expensive for people with really low income. Empty houses are vandalized. Potential buyers register to the NHE and are placed on their waiting list. They are contacted when a suitable house is available [42]. | This project was done by a particular group of people that were the tenants in a community that was evicted. The arrangement of credits and incremental construction (one house at a time) made the project possible [4]. | Accessible for the people who have access to social housing. In Chile the system seems to be rather organized. |
Investment Possibilities Increased value with time. | No private sector participation in the process of low-income housing. Missed opportunity in using housing as a tool for integration of different income groups [42]. | It is possible that the value of the houses has increased, as the methods of construction were the cheapest possible and the houses were constructed without middlemen. | It has been evaluated that the value has increased five-fold in ten years [52]. |
Landownership Clear form and clear information, trust. | Significant administrative costs in urban land registration. There are transaction costs and risks involved to some [40]. | The land was originally purchased with aid from Slum Dwellers international but is now owned by the inhabitants [4]. | The families had occupied the land for 30 years. Land is owned by the state owned Programa Chile Barrio [7]. |
MACRO (National) | MESO (Region, City) | MICRO (Neighbourhood, Household) | |
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Environmental dimension |
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Social dimension |
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Cultural dimension |
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Economic dimension |
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Category | Title | AIM |
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Shelter and Community | Community Sensitive Design | To promote integration of community-sensitive shelter and settlement layout design features which support inclusivity and accessibility for community members. |
Privacy | To recognize and encourage shelter and settlement design measures that respect and promote privacy within the disaster-affected community and where possible eliminates the risk of privacy invasion. | |
Internal Environment | To ensure that the internal environments of individual shelters and community facilities are healthy and comfortable for the occupants. | |
Construction Approach | To recognize and encourage the selection and application of construction methods that are environmentally sound and appropriate to the location and needs of the community. | |
Settlement | Site Selection | To ensure that the site selected for development or redevelopment is suitable for the affected community and other relevant parties, enabling long term sustainable development. |
Security of Tenure | To recognize and support:
| |
Spatial Planning | To ensure that a settlements layout, amenities, other designated land uses and infrastructure sustainably support social, cultural and economic activities, providing the necessary basis for the community to develop and grow. | |
Infrastructure | To recognize and encourage provision of infrastructure systems that are well planned, resource efficient, environmentally friendly, secure, culturally sensitive and economically viable. | |
Materials and Waste | Material Properties/Specification | To encourage the use of construction materials of an appropriate quality and which consider climate, culture, durability, local supply and environmental impact. |
Material Sourcing | To encourage and promote procurement of construction materials based on quality, environmental, social and economic considerations. | |
Post disaster Waste Management | To promote the sustainable management of post disaster waste, by ensuring efficient use, removal and disposal. | |
Construction Waste Management | To promote the sustainable management of waste generated on site during the construction process, by encouraging the efficient use, removal and where necessary disposal of waste. | |
Operational Waste Management | To promote sustainable operational solid waste management throughout the disaster-affected community by proper and effective waste management, solid waste reduction and community education. | |
Energy | Energy Demand & Supply | To establish and optimize the energy demands of the community ensuring that these can be sustainably met in the future through the specification of reliable, affordable and sustainable energy supplies that meet needs of the community. |
Energy Consumption | To ensure that energy is consumed by the affected community in an efficient and sustainable way. | |
Water and Sanitation | Water Demand & Supply | To ensure that the water demand of the affected community is optimised and met for all needs, through a sustainable and secure water supply. |
Water Quality | To ensure that potable water is palatable, of sufficient quality to be consumed and ensures that communities health is not compromised by water resources. | |
Sanitation | To ensure that adequate sanitation solutions, facilities and infrastructure are available for beneficiaries and the importance of hygiene is promoted. | |
Natural Environment | Human Relationship to Ecosystem Services | To develop, implement and effectively communicate a locally appropriate Action Plan which will identify existing ecosystem services and facilitate effective management of human activity in the natural. |
Ecological Protection | To protect the ecological value of the site during the resettlement phase and support on-going ecological protection over the life of the development. | |
Ecological Restoration and Rehabilitation | To encourage the restoration, rehabilitation and enhancement of the ecological value of the site during settlement or re-settlement. |
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Sandman, H.; Levänen, J.; Savela, N. Using Empathic Design as a Tool for Urban Sustainability in Low-Resource Settings. Sustainability 2018, 10, 2493. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072493
Sandman H, Levänen J, Savela N. Using Empathic Design as a Tool for Urban Sustainability in Low-Resource Settings. Sustainability. 2018; 10(7):2493. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072493
Chicago/Turabian StyleSandman, Helena, Jarkko Levänen, and Nina Savela. 2018. "Using Empathic Design as a Tool for Urban Sustainability in Low-Resource Settings" Sustainability 10, no. 7: 2493. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072493
APA StyleSandman, H., Levänen, J., & Savela, N. (2018). Using Empathic Design as a Tool for Urban Sustainability in Low-Resource Settings. Sustainability, 10(7), 2493. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072493