Sustainability Challenges for Sprawling Dhaka. Environment and Urbanization ASIA.
Category:- Journal; Year:- 2021
Discipline:- Urban and Rural Planning Discipline
School:- Science, Engineering & Technology School
Abstract
Dhaka’s sprawled area is likely to supersede the total land area
of the Dhaka city in the near future. This article combines quantitative and
qualitative methods to investigate sustainability concerns that have arisen
because of irregular and rapid sprawling in Dhaka. Land cover change detection
reveals that since 1991, the city outskirts have seen an addition of 234 square
kilometres of built-up area. Spatial metrics show the dynamic process of infill
and the fragmented transformation of land covers in Dhaka, which have led to
low-density, leapfrog and ribbon sprawling. The city outskirts, especially the
economically advantaged regions, have been observing rapid urban densification
of neighbourhoods. Field observation and interviews in 19 sprawled areas
confirm that the change has been influenced by industrialization, increasing
demand for housing, high cost of living in Dhaka city, growing population and
lack of development control regulations. The advantage of the sprawling process
is that it offers economic opportunities, contributing to poverty reduction and
national economic growth. However, the abrupt and sporadic nature of this
transformation puts the long term economic and environmental viability of new
business activities and habitation into question. Congested housing, poor
accessibility, inadequate drainage system and sanitation facilities in sprawled
areas have resulted in poor liveability and created social inequality, thus impeding
the way for a sustainable urban transformation of peri-urban Dhaka. This
article calls for a greater acknowledgement of sustainability concerns in
development control regulations and a more inclusive form of governance to deal
with existing sustainability challenges for Dhaka city and its rapidly
transforming peripheral region.