Urban Regeneration and Renewal: A Case Study of Gaziosmanpasa Municipality in Istanbul
Urban Regeneration and Renewal: A Case Study of Gaziosmanpasa Municipality in Istanbul
Urban Regeneration and Renewal: A Case Study of Gaziosmanpasa Municipality in Istanbul
CIB2007-388
ABSTRACT
Districts within the borders of the Municipality of Gaziosmanpasa, Istanbul,
have been experiencing a fast population growth as a result of immigration.
Unskilled labour and low income groups settled down in these regions
increased the density, and as a result, a general decline in building quality
and health conditions and an increase in crime rates are observed.
Increasing urban obsolescence and new use demands in these regions
necessitate immediate urban regeneration and renewal projects. The
project being carried out for the area of concern, includes the preparation
of local action plan and restructuring, rehabilitation and strengthening
projects in order to create a reliable, sustainable and habitable urban
settlement pattern. Project activities and steps include; analysis of existing
conditions, public survey, database formation and synthesis, development
of scenarios, construction projects design, and implementation. Paper
focuses on the preparation and data collection phases of the project.
Keywords: Urban Regeneration, Renewal, Settlement, Sustainability
1. INTRODUCTION
county status in 1983, and today is quite a large county home to over
950,000 people. As a result of rapid population growth, GOP has been
recognized as one of the largest counties in Istanbul and even in Turkey.
Economic and social problems associated with immigration were reflected
in the built environment; and following the first squatters, construction
without planning, insufficient field inspections, and reconstruction
amnesties encouraged the new illegal settlements. Over the last 50 years,
“storey ownership law” which started the urban demolition and “demolish-
build-sell” method; “improvement construction plans law” which turned the
low-rise squatter houses into the apartment blocks; “construction law”
which changed the building arrangements through construction plan
revisions, collectively resulted in low-standard housing development.
Natural disasters, particularly earthquakes and floods, experienced
over the last decade, showed once again that settlements are unsafe and
unhealthy. The Marmara Earthquake of 1999, in fact, manifested the
dangers of illegal and uncontrolled built environment. Istanbul being
located in the first earthquake zone and expecting strong seismic activities,
brought forth the importance of urban generation.
The dual urban form of Istanbul reflects a distinctive characteristic as
a result of the substandard and poor physical conditions of the squatter
culture and the immigrants on the one hand, and the values and the
traditions of the mainstream urban culture on the other. While there is rapid
change in our social, cultural, economic and physical lifestyle, our cities are
also rapidly changing. Rehabilitation of the areas, which could not adapt to
these changes because of social and economic differences, gains a great
importance. In this case, urban regeneration should not only be understood
as physical, but also as solutions to the social, economic and cultural
problems of high priority. Briefly, urban regeneration should encompass a
process of upgrading living standards and the quality of slums, increasing
social capital in local communities, mitigating urban poverty, encouraging
communal life and social transformation, finally ensuring people’s access to
the services the city offers them.
Within this scope, a regeneration project began in the GOP
municipality, the target of which is to create a healthy and modern urban
space to its residents by clearing the slums and illegal settlement, and
subsequently developing commercial, cultural and social attraction centres
serving the entire county. As part of this project, the relevant literature was
reviewed and local and international examples were analyzed (Göksu
1989-1994, Ozdemir et.al. 2004), and the existing data were gathered. The
existing conditions of the study area were determined by the building
inspections. In this introductory paper, the works done so far and the
preliminary results are briefly presented and discussed.
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2. BACKGROUND
3. CASE STUDY
In the borders of GOP county, there are 29 residential quarters with a total
area of 3500 ha. The pilot study area includes 3 quarters on 154 ha
including 90.6 % squatters. The project is based on new planning
subsequent to the clearance of slum housing beyond salvage because of
the low economic status of the property owners and poor structural quality
of the buildings. The project activities and steps include:
• analysis of existing conditions
• public survey
• database formation
• synthesis
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• development of scenarios
o public participation
• preliminary, detailed and construction projects design
o interdisciplinary engineering
• implementation
o management.
This work mainly focuses in gathering available existing data and new
data obtained through field investigations, and briefly discusses the results.
Besides the archives and the “city information system” prepared using
Geographic Information System (GIS) by the GOP Municipality, statistical
data is available from the Directorate of State Statistics Institute (DIE)
(2000, 2002, and 2003) and Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality (2001).
752,389
800,000
570,943
600,000
393,667
291,715
400,000
200,000
3,847 18,000
0
1935 1955 1985 1990 1997 2000
BLACK SEA
8% 2% 1% EASTERN ANATOLIA
13% 36% CENTRAL ANATOLIA
MARMARA
SOUTHEAST ANATOLIA
MEDITERRANEAN
19%
EGE
21%
9% 2%
13% PRIMARY
SECONDARY
HIGH SCOOL
UNIVERSITY
76%
In GOP, there is one movie theatre with 5 cinema halls, one theatre
building owned by the “City Theatres of Istanbul”, one public library with
18,000 members and 15,000 books, and a football field with a capacity of
500 people where amateur football teams train and practice. However, for
a county with a population of almost one million, these social facilities and
infrastructure seem to be insufficient. Moreover, according to the official
records, there are 802 non-governmental organizations (NGO), most of
which are religious or homecity clubs.
According to data from Tradesman and Artisans’ Union, there are 498
small-scale, 145 middle-scale, and 18 large-scale businesses in GOP.
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The first development plan (scale 1:5000) for GOP was approved in 1966.
In 1985, before the approval of Rehabilitation Plans in 1992, the
implementation plans (scale 1:1000) were prepared but not implemented.
The illegal squatter occupations continued to grow on state-owned lands
more than planned settlements in the study area.
Figure 4 illustrates the distribution of land use in the regeneration area
as were actually implemented. There are 10 religious facility areas, 4
primary school areas, 3 secondary school areas, 30 green areas, and 1
forestation area in the development implementation plan. 65 % of the
planned area is currently allocated to green space. Northern GOP has
potential for a dam lake, forest zones, planned zoo, beautiful landscape
and an area reserved for housing. The implementation of educational
facilities, a cultural center, shopping mall projects surrounding the study
area, which are expected to trigger the regeneration, has already started.
2% 8% PRIMARY SCHOOL
6%
SECONDORY SCHOOL
RELIGIOIUS FACILITY
21% PARK
63% FOREST AREA
Field survey area, for the time being, is limited only to Sarigol, Yenidogan
and Yildiztabya Neighborhoods with a total area of 154 hectares. The
population settled in this area is 54,000 and the total number of buildings in
this zone is 10,540. The population density in the study area is 351
persons/ha. These field works were completed in 3 months.
Figure 5 represents an aerial view of the study area. The main green area
seen in the center of the picture and within the borders of the study area is
the cemetery. Density is somewhat increasing along the main
transportation arteries. Except for the areas with high slopes and the
cemetery, almost the entire field has been developed by buildings. There
are total 10,540 building units in the study area. 10,519 of them are
residential buildings, 11 of them are religious buildings and 6 of them are
official buildings. It is horrible that 99.8 % of the current land utilization is for
housing.
All the green areas, social facilities and public properties are occupied
by illegal housing. Compulsory purchase of the squatters at the social
facility site has already started, and they are being expropriated. Since
2005, expropriation of 44 squatter units was completed, 42 units of which
are still ongoing, and 12 units of which were requested to be expropriated.
Number of
Ground 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 10 Total
floors
Number of
3662 4182 1665 672 266 76 14 1 1 1 10540
buildings
% 34.7 39.7 15.8 6.4 2.5 0.8 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0
In the study area, there are a total of 1854 plots; 1199 of which are private,
552 of which are owned by GOP Municipality, 49 by treasury, 46 by
Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality and 8 by public institutions. Figure 6
displays the distribution of land ownership in the study area. The smallest
parcel, which is a public-owned property at the project site, is 66 m2; the
biggest one is 57,127 m2 and is owned by the Istanbul Metropolitan
Municipality. Average parcel size is 477 m2. Ownership is the most
important problem in regeneration projects, and increases the project
costs. In our cities, urban plots are mostly multi-shared and small in size.
In spite of the low income level, 68,5 % of GOP residents own their
home. This is the result of licensing the illegal houses occupied public
areas by “property allocation certificates”.
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3.2.2 Questionnaire
Surveys have not been carried out yet. Data aimed to be collected through
questionnaires include: demographics, educational data, economic and
employment information, reasons for selecting the region, habits (reading,
movie, theatre, etc), expectations about home and environment etc.
4. DISCUSSION
The preliminary studies and the preparatory work are briefly evaluated
under three main subjects: physical conditions, economic conditions, and
socio-cultural conditions.
Due to low economic status of the property owners, lack of resources for
building maintenance projects, and difficulties in reaching financial sources,
physical corruption occurred in the region. Such corruption requires urban
reconstruction which is one of the implementation tools of urban
regeneration.
The quality of physical life is considerably low. There are very little or
almost no public facilities and spaces. Thus, beside the residential areas,
public spaces and facilities like commercial and cultural areas, open and
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Poverty and population growth are global problems. Because of the relation
with poverty, regeneration and renewal actions in housing areas are never
simple housing problems. Low- and middle-income groups are located in
this area. Since the unemployment ratio is high, it is important to create
new job opportunities. A more powerful labour society, integrated with
greater economies, should be developed. Aspects of the urban
regeneration implementations should have wider and comprehensive vision
and strategic point of view.
Separate urban identities characterize the site. Crime rate is high. Security
problem affects social and economic structure. Activities of NGOs are
insufficient. Site lacks organization and social participation. Level of
education is low. In contrast with the high ratios of younger age groups,
qualified population is very low. The city continues to suffer from migration
and is used as a stepping stone toward social mobility. Those who improve
their economic circumstances leave the area. Migration of unqualified and
low-income population to the site increases the population density. An
increase in the population density causes a decline of the construction
quality and health conditions, and an increase in crime rates in the area.
These areas pose real threats to their surroundings with their unhealthy
conditions and high crime rates. Due to the strategic important location of
the site for the district of GOP, a regeneration/renewal project for this site
becomes urgent. Urban identity, a sense of belonging and membership
should be improved. Opportunities for cultural, sports and public activities
should be provided. Equality of opportunities for every member of the
society should be the first goal. High quality health care and social services
should be provided. It should not be forgotten that cultural investments will
provide paybacks in the projects.
5. CONCLUSION
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6. REFERENCES