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The seed pod : facilitating self organizing robust settlement patterns in developing countries

Darwin's theory of natural selection defines a conscious process of self organisation in which traits become more or less common in such a way that an organism is able to survive and flourish in a particular environment. Rapid growth in the last fifty years made possible by more and more efficient w...

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Main Author: Auerbach, Rupert
Other Authors: Carter, Francis
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Auerbach, Rupert
author2 Carter, Francis
author_browse Auerbach, Rupert
Carter, Francis
author_facet Carter, Francis
Auerbach, Rupert
author_sort Auerbach, Rupert
collection Thesis
description Darwin's theory of natural selection defines a conscious process of self organisation in which traits become more or less common in such a way that an organism is able to survive and flourish in a particular environment. Rapid growth in the last fifty years made possible by more and more efficient ways of harvesting resource has created rapid environmental change. Intricately balanced ecologies that have taken millions of years to evolve are suffering from unravelling diversity. It is essential that ballooning populations around the world develop systems in which individual settlements positively affect surrounding ecologies. The effect of sick ecologies and drained resources are most harshly felt by the poor in developing countries. The situation boils down to provision of an element which firstly provides the vital requirements for survival while positively affecting the ecologies of which it is a part; secondly allows settlements to adapt over time according to the traits of users in an environment rather than those of a hierarchical disconnected third party and thirdly insures that survival does not depend on having lots of children. The seed pod aims to grow a localized ecology which allows urbanisation for the poor in developing countries to follow self organizing settlement patterns. Goals: Healthy living becomes possible in the local ecology without employment (unemployment is a reality) Financial resources are freed up for facilities such as schools Social support networks strengthen Minimization of strain on resources allows diversity to flourish Construction of instant communities is replaced by a robust self organizing process of development with the capacity to adapt to rapidly changing conditions The seeds are sown and the settlement grows organically from each unique social and ecological environment Empowerment, self reliance and local skills are generated A community lease and a community-managed register of rights holders with the potential for upgrade to individual ownership provides people the opportunity for long term investment in a great living environment. Resolution at a micro scale is likely to result in more conflict then provision of large scale identically defined units. If systems are put in place to help resolve conflict, however, the process would be tangibly more democratic. The seed pod goes hand in hand with a system for conflict resolution illustrated by the phased growth of Green Park an informal settlement in Driftsands Nature Reserve and by notionally suggesting the integration of the education system into the community through a transition of safe, contained learning spaces and permeable public spaces.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
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publisher School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/16353 The seed pod : facilitating self organizing robust settlement patterns in developing countries Auerbach, Rupert Carter, Francis Steenkamp, Alta Noero, Joe Architecture, Planning and Geomatics Darwin's theory of natural selection defines a conscious process of self organisation in which traits become more or less common in such a way that an organism is able to survive and flourish in a particular environment. Rapid growth in the last fifty years made possible by more and more efficient ways of harvesting resource has created rapid environmental change. Intricately balanced ecologies that have taken millions of years to evolve are suffering from unravelling diversity. It is essential that ballooning populations around the world develop systems in which individual settlements positively affect surrounding ecologies. The effect of sick ecologies and drained resources are most harshly felt by the poor in developing countries. The situation boils down to provision of an element which firstly provides the vital requirements for survival while positively affecting the ecologies of which it is a part; secondly allows settlements to adapt over time according to the traits of users in an environment rather than those of a hierarchical disconnected third party and thirdly insures that survival does not depend on having lots of children. The seed pod aims to grow a localized ecology which allows urbanisation for the poor in developing countries to follow self organizing settlement patterns. Goals: Healthy living becomes possible in the local ecology without employment (unemployment is a reality) Financial resources are freed up for facilities such as schools Social support networks strengthen Minimization of strain on resources allows diversity to flourish Construction of instant communities is replaced by a robust self organizing process of development with the capacity to adapt to rapidly changing conditions The seeds are sown and the settlement grows organically from each unique social and ecological environment Empowerment, self reliance and local skills are generated A community lease and a community-managed register of rights holders with the potential for upgrade to individual ownership provides people the opportunity for long term investment in a great living environment. Resolution at a micro scale is likely to result in more conflict then provision of large scale identically defined units. If systems are put in place to help resolve conflict, however, the process would be tangibly more democratic. The seed pod goes hand in hand with a system for conflict resolution illustrated by the phased growth of Green Park an informal settlement in Driftsands Nature Reserve and by notionally suggesting the integration of the education system into the community through a transition of safe, contained learning spaces and permeable public spaces. 2016-01-12T11:21:02Z 2016-01-12T11:21:02Z 2009 Master Thesis Masters MArch (Professional) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16353 eng application/pdf School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Architecture, Planning and Geomatics
Auerbach, Rupert
The seed pod : facilitating self organizing robust settlement patterns in developing countries
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The seed pod : facilitating self organizing robust settlement patterns in developing countries
title_full The seed pod : facilitating self organizing robust settlement patterns in developing countries
title_fullStr The seed pod : facilitating self organizing robust settlement patterns in developing countries
title_full_unstemmed The seed pod : facilitating self organizing robust settlement patterns in developing countries
title_short The seed pod : facilitating self organizing robust settlement patterns in developing countries
title_sort seed pod facilitating self organizing robust settlement patterns in developing countries
topic Architecture, Planning and Geomatics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16353
work_keys_str_mv AT auerbachrupert theseedpodfacilitatingselforganizingrobustsettlementpatternsindevelopingcountries
AT auerbachrupert seedpodfacilitatingselforganizingrobustsettlementpatternsindevelopingcountries