Return to search

Regularizing informal settlements for sustainable housing development for the urban poor : the case of Nairobi, Kenya.

In Kenya, as in most developing countries, the provision of adequate housing for the urban
poor has been an elusive exercise for the past five decades. Since the early 1960s when
serious concerns were raised over housing provision for low income groups and the
proliferation of slums and informal settlements, various intervention strategies have been
applied without much success. The failure of these interventions has been attributed to
high costs of implementation hindering their replication, and displacement of targeted
beneficiaries by better endowed income groups upon their completion. As a result, the
realised moderate density housing has been transforming into multi-storey housing with
intense densification. Housing and the built environment in general are realised within the
prevailing systems of social, physical, and economic, settings and are influenced by
development and urbanization trends. The purpose of this study therefore was to identify,
account and document the prevailing systems of settings and the embedded systems of
activities in the informal settlements that determine and sustain them in the city of Nairobi,
Kenya. The study analysed these systems at the city, the neighbourhood, and the dwelling
levels with the objective of establishing relevant systems of settings and their embedded
systems of activities appropriate for adaption in the regularization of informal settlements
for sustainable housing development for the urban poor in Nairobi.
Both qualitative and quantitative research methodology was utilised in this explorative
study. The research methodology applied entailed questionnaires, interviews, observations
and discussions. Three case study areas were selected representing three different settings
for informal settlements namely; informal settlement on government land with minimal
level of interventions; community based informal settlement upgraded for rental housing;
and site-and-service settlement informally transforming into multi-storey tenements.
Theories and concepts that informed this study include Environment-Behaviour Relations,
Environment-Attitude Relations, Sustainable Livelihoods, Social, and Market Theories.
The study was conducted in Mathare Valley informal settlement of Nairobi which is
located approximately six kilometres from the city centre. The settlement was selected
because of the varied informalities it hosts in addition to being the oldest informal
settlement in the city.
The findings of the study show that the social, economic and physical systems of settings
are crucial determinants of housing outcomes and determine the location, nature and
characteristics of these settlements including the activities they embody at the city, the
neighbourhood and the dwelling levels. Similarly, the study shows that the dwellers adapt
to the prevailing systems of settings in response to their livelihood constraints,
opportunities and capabilities. As a consequence, limitations arising from economic
constraints have led to the predominance of rental housing over owner-occupied housing.
Limited access to land has led to crowding and densification. Poverty and unemployment
has led to uncontrolled commercial activities within residential neighbourhoods.
The study recommends that intervention approaches spearheading regularization of
informal settlements commence by considering the problem of informal settlements at city
level where their recognition and acceptance is important. This should then be related to
job opportunities, ease of access to work, and other social amenities. At the
neighbourhood and dwelling levels where the two are intertwined, emphasis should be
given to maximum utilization of land and development of housing typologies that evolve
with economic improvement of the nation. The government and local authorities should
still be responsible for infrastructure development whereas private investors encouraged to
develop rental housing targeting the low-income groups and on land designated for such
purpose by the government. Market forces should be allowed to determine rent levels. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2011.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:ukzn/oai:http://researchspace.ukzn.ac.za:10413/7799
Date January 2011
CreatorsDiang'a, Stephen Onyango.
ContributorsAdebayo, Ambrose A.
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
Languageen_ZA
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

Page generated in 0.0021 seconds