Slum free India program. Report on the findings and recommendations of QUT BEE workshop to investigate strategies to deliver better outcomes


Autoria(s): Kennedy, Rosemary J.; Gudur, Swati; Betts, Martin
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

As a result of a broad invitation extended by Professor Martin Betts, Executive Dean of the Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering, to the community of interest at QUT, a cross-disciplinary collaborative workshop was conducted to contribute ideas about responding to the Government of India’s urgent requirement to implement a program to re-house slum dwellers. This is a complex problem facing the Indian Ministry of Housing. Not only does the government aspire to eradicate existing slum conditions and to achieve tangible results within five years, but it must also ensure that slums do not form in the future. The workshop focused on technological innovation in construction to deliver transformation from the current unsanitary and overcrowded informal urban settlements to places that provide the economically weaker sections of Indian society with healthy, environmentally sustainable, economically viable mass housing that supports successful urban living. The workshop was conducted in two part process as follows: Initially, QUT academics from diverse fields shared current research and provided technical background to contextualise the challenge at a pre-workshop briefing session. This was followed by a one-day workshop during which participants worked intensively in multi-disciplinary groups through a series of exercises to develop innovative approaches to the complex problem of slum redevelopment. Dynamic, compressed work sessions, interspersed with cross-functional review and feedback by the whole group took place throughout the day. Reviews emphasised testing the concepts for their level of complexity, and likelihood of success. The two-stage workshop process achieved several objectives:  Inspired a sense of shared purpose amongst a diverse group of academics  Built participants’ knowledge of each other’s capacity  Engaged multi disciplinary team in an innovative design research process  Built participants’ confidence in the collaborative process  Demonstrated that collaborative problem solving can create solutions that represent transformative change.  Developed a framework of how workable solutions might be developed for the program through follow up workshops and charrettes of a similar nature involving stakeholders drawn from the context of the slum housing program management.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40321/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40321/1/2011006296_Kennedy_ePrints.pdf

Kennedy, Rosemary J., Gudur, Swati, & Betts, Martin (2010) Slum free India program. Report on the findings and recommendations of QUT BEE workshop to investigate strategies to deliver better outcomes.

Direitos

Copyright 2010 Queensland University Of Technology

Fonte

Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; School of Design

Palavras-Chave #120100 ARCHITECTURE #Sustainability #Affordable Housing #Poverty Reduction #Public Health #Urban Renewal
Tipo

Report