Abstract:
The objective of this paper is to reveal the shift of thoughts in city
planning in terms of livability demonstrated in one of the newly planned
satellite towns of Dhaka city. Ever since the emergence of the term
'livable cities' back in 1980’s by IMCL (International Making Cities
Livable LLC), considerable amount of research and practice have been
oriented towards understanding how the contemporary cities should
grow or be planned for livability, in terms of physical, socio-economic
and cultural aspects. Cities around the globe demonstrate diversified
vision, policies and strategies for achieving these desired goals. This
paper takes Dhaka city as a case study to critically investigate the
intentions and attempts of urban planning and design practice focused
on the livability aspects of the city. The human settlement of Dhaka city
can be traced back as early as the 12th century. Till then, the city
received attention, negligence, natural calamity, political instability and
went through a number of philosophical views as well as planning
proposals for its development. In all its efforts, the intrinsic components
of livability were much less emphasized due to the major thrust on city’s
physical constraint, limited land resources along with negligence in
detail area and neighborhood planning. But recent efforts in one of the
newly planned satellite town Purbachal shows evidence of change in the
traditional paradigm of planning practice. The ultimate objective of this
paper is to reveal the points where the proposed master plan of
Purbachal succeeded or failed to embrace the principals of livability
learnt from earlier precedence of greater Dhaka city. The findings of this
paper have been extracted from the studio exercise of Urban Design
Studio of the Department of Architecture, University of Asia Pacific. The
study was mainly based on case study, examining documented evidence
and map & model study along with expert interview.