The influence of urban public space patterns on degradation of external envelop of urban blocks: the case of Nairobi Central Business District
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Date
2006Author
Moirongo, Bernard Otoki
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
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A view through Central Business Districts (CBD) of most Kenyan cities show that some buildings have either been abandoned or
been left unattended thus, enhancing dereliction and decay of the built environment. Since it is not whole city centres that are
decaying, it is likelys that the spatial structure and hence the urban space patterns would be having something to do with social,
economic and the environmental survival of these capital assets. This paper has empirically established that 33 urban space
variables out of 436 variables significantly relate with dereliction and decay of built environment in the Central Business District of
the city of Nairobi. This has been done by regressing indexes relating to abandonment, faqade construction, completeness and
exterior maintenance and cleanliness of buildings bounding urban space against urban space variables: spatial, social, cultural
and economic. These established variables have been grouped into the following urban pattems: constitutedness of space,
segregation or integration of space, distributedness of space, grain, land use, and density. The paper argues that most of these
patterns have a lot to do with the presence and distribution of human in the settlements. The paper concludes that humanisation
of settlements is very important in curbing the decay of built environment.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
- Journal Articles [10]
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