Singapore vs. the ‘Singapore of Africa’—Different Approaches to Managing Urban Agriculture
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Institutional and legal framework of urban agriculture and policy toward its development, including land ownership and land use policy, institutions governing urban agriculture, and planning documents;
- Spatial features, including distribution and location, and area (total, mean, minimum, maximum);
- Inherent features, including systems of production (animal and/or plant), main crops, production methods, and functions.
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Singapore—City of the Future
3.1.1. Spatial Policy and Urban Agriculture Management
3.1.2. Contemporary Urban Agriculture in Singapore
Spatial Distribution of Urban Agriculture
Features of Urban Agriculture
3.2. Kigali—‘The Singapore of Africa’
3.2.1. Spatial Planning and Urban Agriculture Management
3.2.2. Contemporary Urban Agriculture in Kigali
Spatial Distribution of Urban Agriculture
Features of Urban Agriculture
4. Discussion
4.1. Future of Urban Agriculture in Singapore
4.2. Future of Urban Agriculture in Kigali
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristic | Attribute | Singapore | Kigali |
---|---|---|---|
institutional and legal framework of urban agriculture and policy towards its development | land ownership and land use system | 90% of land state-owned; the Singapore Land Authority—the institution responsible for land management; land lease for agriculture—a maximum of 20 years (extended from 10 years); 1–3 years lease and short-term farm license system; limited possibilities to extend the lease period due to centralized decision-making process | private ownership of the land allowed provided every purchase is registered in line with the Land Tenure Regularization; common practice—the granting of a temporary right to lease unused plots of land (both state-owned and privately owned land) for the purpose of food production (industrial scale excluded); centralized decision-making process |
institutions governing urban agriculture | Agri-Food & Veterinary Authority of Singapore (the Singapore Food Agency; the Animal & Veterinary Service) | no designated institution | |
provisions of the planning documents | Singapore Master Plan 2019: planned reduction of the agricultural area; supported forms of agricultural activity: agrotechnology park, aquaculture farm, plant nursery, hydroponics farm or agricultural research/experimental station | Kigali Master Plan 2020 (and previous versions from 2009 and 2013): planned reduction of the agricultural land, preservation of agricultural land in the peri-urban area; support of kitchen gardens; planned development of the Urban Agriculture Development Plan, the Urban Agriculture Extension Manual and the Integrated Urban Agriculture Management Plan | |
spatial features | distribution and location | main area of concentration of urban agriculture—the Kranji Countryside in the periphery of the city, where 28 out of 36 (77.8%) analyzed urban farms are located, the remaining 8 out of 36 (22.2%) farms scattered across the inner-city | concentration in vast valley bottoms—35 out of 98 (35.7%) agricultural sites analyzed; concentration on hill slopes 63 out of 98 (64.3%) agricultural sites analyzed; agriculture present in all districts: Gasabo (48 sites), Kicukiro (23), Nyarugenge (17), Nyarugenge/Gasabo (5), Nyarugenge/Kicukiro (2), Gasabo/Kicukiro (3) |
total area | 188.82 ha (the Kranji Countryside—178.76 ha; other districts—10 ha) | 1170.4 ha (valley bottoms—1011.49 ha; hill slopes—158.89 ha) | |
mean area | 5.24 ha (the Kranji Countryside—6.39 ha; other districts—1.25 ha) | 11.9 ha (valley bottoms—28.9 ha; hill slopes—2.52 ha) | |
minimum area | 0.28 ha | 0.009 ha | |
maximum area | 21 ha | 284.59 ha | |
inherent features | systems of production | 28 farms (77.8%)—plant production; 6 farms (16.7%)—animal production; 2 farms (5.5%)—plant and animal production (aquaculture included) | 96 urban agriculture sites (98%)—plant production; 2 sites (2%)—plant and animal production |
main crops | Asian leafy vegetables—21 farms (58.3% of all farms analyzed and 70% of farms specialized in plant production) | maize (68% of sites analyzed), bananas (48%), manioc (39%), yams (37%) and sweet potatoes (24%), other crops: cabbage, lettuce, tomatoes, rice | |
main production methods | 14 farms (38.9%)—soil-based cultivation; 7 farms (19.4%)—hydroponics; other methods—organoponics, grow-bags | soil-based cultivation, only traditional production methods | |
functions | primary: commercial; secondary: recreational, educational | primary: subsistence, secondary: commercial (sale of surpluses) |
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Górna, A.; Górny, K. Singapore vs. the ‘Singapore of Africa’—Different Approaches to Managing Urban Agriculture. Land 2021, 10, 987. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10090987
Górna A, Górny K. Singapore vs. the ‘Singapore of Africa’—Different Approaches to Managing Urban Agriculture. Land. 2021; 10(9):987. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10090987
Chicago/Turabian StyleGórna, Ada, and Krzysztof Górny. 2021. "Singapore vs. the ‘Singapore of Africa’—Different Approaches to Managing Urban Agriculture" Land 10, no. 9: 987. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10090987
APA StyleGórna, A., & Górny, K. (2021). Singapore vs. the ‘Singapore of Africa’—Different Approaches to Managing Urban Agriculture. Land, 10(9), 987. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10090987