Tuesday, January 10, 2012

The urban design of a Balinese town: placemaking issues in the Balinese urban setting

Author: T. Nirarta Samadhi
Habitat International 25 (2001) pp.559–575
This paper discussed at the Study Seminar in Urban Planning Lab, School of Natural Science & Technology on Friday, January 20, 2012 by Pindo Tutuko


The Urban Design of A Balinese Town: Place Making Issues in the Balinese Urban Setting

This exploration aims at providing a ground for reconnecting urban design proposals with their cultural context, thus promoting the spatially expressed localism originating from the diversity of cultures which is currently undermined by the highly  standardized process of the Indonesian planning system. The research concludes that to achieve culturally appropriate places, the design process has to acknowledge the Balinese Hindu psycho-cosmic concept as the core principle in the design of Balinese townscape.

Relevant Balinese traditional-religious conceptions

The Balinese understand that reality shadows the play of sekala (tangible/real) and niskala (intangible/unreal) forces, which are either (or both) generative or (and) degenerative. The forces are kept in a harmonious balance in Balinese architecture and environment by assigning attributes to the Balinese space.




Dewata Nawa Sanga. The Balinese indigenous windrose: a center and eight cardinals, represent the nine
different forces. The Hindu triad is vertically positioned on the figure: Wisnu, Shiwa and Brahma.


The Concept

Center:  In most of the Southeast Asian tribes (custom) not just in religious and cosmological terms but also in political realm. The physical manifestation of the concept:

  • The form of a ‘grand crossroad’
  • The important Balinese settlement’s functions such as the palace ( puri), the temple ( pura), the priest’s house (griya), the
  • Public meeting hall (wantilan), and the marketplace ( pasar).
The center's elements: 1.Puri (Palace), 2.Wantilan (Meeting House), 3. Pasar (Market Place), 4. Lapangan (Square/open place), 5. Residential, 6. Pampatan Agung (grand Cross Road)




Another important concept to understand is the psycho-cosmic concept




Another important concept to understand is the psycho-cosmic concept
  1. Relationship between bhuwana agung (Macrocosm)and bhuwana alit (microcosm)
  2. Five Basic elements: pertiwi (earth/solid substance), apah (water/fluid substance), teja (fire/light/heat), bayu (air), and akasa (space/ether).
It were identified from the questionnaires and sketched mental maps.
  1. Attitude to Human being (environment relationship)---desa adat (custom village)
  2. The concept of center----pampatan agung (Great cross road)
  3. Attitude to spatial organization---Sanga Mandala (wind rose)
  4. Attitude to environmental design
  5. Attitude to symbols and meanings 
Conclusion
  • In the practical realm, the Indonesian urban planning and design administrative and legal procedures suggest a centralized system in which the local government runs the national planning Model
  • This tradition has influenced the way Indonesian urban planners and designers assess their projects

Monday, November 21, 2011

Global Land Consolidation for Metropolitan Jakarta Expansion, 1990-2010


Author:Ray W, Archer
Resumed by Pindo Tutuko for Study Seminar
Urban Planning Laboratory, Kanazawa University, Japan
Presented on Friday, November 25, 2011


Global Land Consolidation for Metropolitan Jakarta Expansion, 1990-2010
Urban land consolidation (LC) is an international technique for managing and financing the conversion of rural land to urban land.  This paper recommends the formulation of an LC programme to supply some of the urban land needed to accommodate this growth. The three parts present on 1.The land and building development taking place around Jakarta, Describes LC as an international technique and outlines the Indonesian experience, and Identifies the possible applications of LC.
The Metropolitan Jakarta Region encompasses Jakarta and its four neighbouring regencies of Bogor, Tangerang, Depok, and Bekasi.  The population of Jabodetabek is projected to grow from 17 million in 1990 to 30 million by 2010 with most of this growth, 10 million of the 13 million, taking place in the Bodetabek areas. DKI Jakarta is  a “special capital province” in which thprovincial and municipal administrationare integrated. The land ownership, tenure and transfer system administreted by the Ministry of National Land Agency. The physical conversion of rural land to urban use for the expansion of Metropolitan Jakarta mainly takes place by private sector land. This private development activity can be divided into formal and informal private development. The formal private development is the land subdivision and building development that is carried out on land that is held on a registered title, with the permits required and to the standards specified by the planning and building regulations.
Informal Private development is the land subdivision/partition and building construction carried out on land that is not held on a registered title. The informal development is that the housing, and most other buildings, are constructed by the owners’ self-build.
The four main ways of development
  1. By bringing additional unregistered rural land into the formal development system.
  2. By constructing the desirable network infrastructure in each project so as to convert the rural land for sustainable urban development.
  3. By creating a supply of serviced building plots on registered title for self-build housing development.
  4. By bringing some of the land currently blocked from development by the excessive location permit designations, into early development.
Definition of LC are: LC is a land development technique used in many countries for managing and financing the urbanization of selected urban fringe areas (peri) and also LC is a technique for converting rural land into urban land. LC is widely used in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, and is used in some cities in Australia and Canada as well as many cities and towns in Europe, Indonesia, Nepal, Thailand, Malaysia.



The LC programme would be designed to improve the process and pattern of urban expansion in Jabodetabek by:
  1. Bringing unused development land under the excessive location permit designations into early development.
  2. Enabling the farmer Iandowners to participate in the urban development of their land and to obtain longer term benefits.
  3. Increasing the production of planned layouts of subdivision land and building land equipped with roads, drains. and utility service lines.
  4. Increasing the supplv of serviced subdivision land and building land on registered title that is suitable for self-build housing development in the formal sector.
  5. Filling the gaps between the real estate company projects(the National housing projects, the kampong settlements and the other areas of informal urban development.
  6. lmproving the structure of urban development by specific purpose LC projects to establish networks of secondary roads, urban sub-centres, etc. 


    Original Source: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0197397594900167