Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1047827 Habitat International 2015 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•This paper analyses the historic interplay between water and settlement in Bogotá.•Changes in water management are related to socio-economic and cultural factors.•Pre-Hispanic soft engineered practices aligned productivity, culture and settlement patterns.•Since the colonial period, water management has become purely a technical problem.•New “soft” water management tools are needed for climate change adaptation.•Their implementation will require engaging with community agencies.

A paradigm shift in water management is recognized as a necessary and fundamental step for adaptation to climate change and crucial for furthering sustainability. In contexts of rapid urbanization, this paradigm shift is particularly challenged since social and environmental needs often come into conflict. In Bogotá, as other Latin-American cities, demands for new housing are increasing daily, while the overall housing deficit remains an unresolved problem. Currently, the city faces the challenges to deal with the pressure to continue to urbanize flood prone areas with low-cost housing projects and simultaneously protect these areas in view of flooding, which promise to increase with the predictions of climate change. In order to contribute to context-responsive solutions to the water and housing issues, this paper investigates the shifting relations between settlement patterns, water infrastructure and landscape in Bogotá's El Tintal watershed. This sub-watershed of the Bogotá River has a rich history of formal and informal low-cost housing. The critical reading of the landscape transformation of the El Tintal has shown how the water system interventions were and can be instrumental in different stages of development. This reading was the base to elaborate design investigations that could translate to spatial adaptation measures. This paper argues that “soft” water management tools can be part of a twofold strategy to create spatial quality and provide resilience for more qualitative future urban development.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Social Sciences Development
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