Plan 3
Plan 3
Plan 3
URBAN RENEWAL
SUBMITTED BY:
KRIZZIALEE C. BECARES
BSARCH 4A
SUBMITTED TO:
AR. DEMI VERDE
Instructor
The following are the three examples of Urban renewal in the
Philippines:
Elizalde Building
(Commission on Audit)
She added that the position of the Iloilo City Cultural Heritage
Conservation Council is to “improve the installation and
encourage the private sector to do their part.” (PNA)
The developer (Base Conversion and Development Authority) manages the sale of inventory to
avoid real estate speculation. “We are not simply looking at what the market demands,” Mr
Casanova added.
“That’s why our first investment is in schools. So if you educate and you develop your human
capital, you will create your own opportunity. We should not be afraid of losing jobs, when we can
create our own jobs, right? And that will drive innovation.”
3. ) URBAN RENEWAL IN METROPOLITAN MANILA
Renewal of the city involves the apportioning of resources for proportionate social
and economic benefits and the provision of a physical environment that is conducive to
living and all its varied functions with the end in view to providing the desired
socioeconomic balance in the communities. Urban renewal must fulfil objectives of social,
economic, educational, and physical well-being, considering both immediate needs and
those of the foreseeable future. It is social because it assigns the goals determined in
areas like health, transportation, social welfare, economic development, or housing - to a
higher category, meaning their impact and influence on the needs of people and their
particular role in evolving a more livable city. The Ministry of Human Settlements (MHS)
was created to undertake the nationwide provision of the eleven basic needs. These are:
water, power, food, shelter, livelihood or economic base, medical services, education and
technology, ecological balance, sports and recreation, clothing and cottage industry, and
mobility.
BLISS, the acronym for the multi-level Bagong Lipunan (New Society)
Improvement of Sites and Services, an MHS activity, is carrying out the provision of the
eleven basic needs. Aimed at building self-reliant and self-sufficient human settlements,
the BLISS project is classified into three levels. The first level refers to neighbourhood
communities of 50-100 families living on 2.5 hectares. The second level refers to agro-
industrial 22. communities of 100-500 families living on 50-200 hectares; the third level
refers to watershed-based ecological communities of at least 500 families situated in
watershed areas of at least 500 hectares.