Vattanac Tower is currently the tallest completed skyscraper in Phnom Penh at 184 metres. Hong Menea |
Cambodia, Asia facing test to build liveable cities
Phnom Penh Post | 27 March 2017
The news this January that two Chinese companies had signed an
agreement to build the world’s tallest twin towers in Phnom Penh
understandably raised eyebrows in Cambodia and around the region. As
with so many grandiose plans, financing will be key for this reported
$2.7 billion project in what remains one of Asia’s poorest nations, as
measured by per capita gross domestic product.
But even if funding is finalised and construction begins, a critical
question remains: How best to balance Asia’s drive to build higher with
the need to respect what remains below? Former first lady Michelle Obama
famously said at the 2016 Democratic National Convention in
Philadelphia, “When they go low, we go high.”
That memorable turn of phrase reminds me today less of the ugliness
of past political campaigns, and more of Asia’s changing skylines
including Phnom Penh’s. Indeed, those same words from the former first
lady have relevance – in a different, economic context in both the
United States and Asia – as a new administration in Washington focuses
on rebuilding America.
US President Donald Trump is certainly no stranger to skyscrapers.
Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue in New York is arguably one of the most
famous addresses in the world. In Chicago – site of the world’s first
skyscraper – the Trump International Hotel & Tower, completed in
2009, is the second tallest completed building in that city, and the
fourth tallest in the United States.
The United States long ago ceded the title of world’s tallest
building to Asia and the Middle East. Seven of the top 10 tallest
completed buildings in the world are now in Asia, according to the
Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat. This Chicago-headquartered
non-profit organisation founded in 1969 maintains The Skyscraper Center,
a database on the world’s tallest buildings.
As of March 2017, the world’s tallest buildings are the Burj Khalifa
in Dubai at 828 metres, the Shanghai Tower in China at 631 metres, and
the Makkah Royal Clock Tower in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, at 601 metres. At
number four is 1 World Trade Center in New York at 541 metres.
Hong Kong boasts the eighth tallest building the International
Commerce Center. In Southeast Asia, the tallest buildings are Kuala
Lumpur’s Petronas Twin Towers; the Keangnam Hanoi Landmark Tower, in
Vietnam; and Bangkok’s recently completed MahaNakhon tower all at more
than 304 metres tall.
The Vattanac Capital building in Phnom Penh at 184 metres is now
Cambodia’s tallest completed building, according to The Skyscraper
Center.
Cities across Asia are growing outwards and upwards at breakneck speed, with the World Bank forecasting decades of urban growth to come. Despite almost 200 million people already having moved to Asia’s cities in the first decade of the 21st century, the region’s ongoing urbanisation is likely only to intensify.
Liveable cities, however, need more than skyscrapers. The people, the
street life, and the neighbourhoods at the bottom of the buildings must
not be lost in the shadows of new development.
As cities build taller, they must keep three key benchmarks for liveability in mind community, resilience and sustainability.
First, communities must be put at the heart of urban development.
Urban planners must consider not only the impact of a city’s design and
new construction on traffic efficiency or parking spaces, but also on
inequality and on human lives.
Amid the rush to maximise real estate returns, developers must also
incorporate public, open spaces to build a sense of community, cultivate
street life and encourage social interaction.
And that fostering of community should ideally include people from
all walks of life and income levels.Second, cities must build in
resilience.
A society or city that is socially inclusive and with strong
community bonds leads to a city that is also resilient. An initiative of
the Rockefeller Foundation, 100 Resilient Cities, defines urban
resilience as the capacity to survive, adapt and grow no matter the
stresses or shocks they experience.
Beyond skyscrapers, cities must build in comprehensive security and
rule of law, effective public health systems, inclusive housing and
labour policies, and diverse transport networks, as well as effective
delivery of emergency services.
Here, the private sector, including insurance and reinsurance
companies, will play a necessary role along with government policies to
encourage an enabling environment for resilience.
And third, cities need to grow in an environmentally sustainable
manner.With more and more people moving into cities, tackling
environmental challenges is already increasingly an urban issue.
Incorporating innovations and technologies in areas such as
infrastructure, energy and transport will be essential to building
smarter if not “smart cities”. Here again, the contributions and coming
together of public, private and not-for-profit sectors will be
important.
There are many ways to measure a city’s success. At the Milken
Institute, where I serve as that non-partisan economic think tank’s
inaugural Asia Fellow, our researchers since 1999 have used a
comprehensive, fact-based set of criteria to rank 200 large and 201
small metros across the US as part of an annual Best-Performing Cities
index.
The economic outcomes-based index heavily weighs growth in
employment, wages and technology. More subjective metrics such as
quality-of-life and cost-of-living are not included.
This past year, tech still drove the top rankings as cities that
excelled in innovation again topped the index, with San Jose,
California, in Silicon Valley, claiming the No1 spot for the second year
in a row. A similar Milken Institute Best Performing Cities China list
based on official Chinese economic, jobs, wage growth, foreign direct
investment and other data singled out Shanghai, Guiyang and Zhoushan as
top performers.
Certainly, not all cities are blessed with the resources that Silicon
Valley’s urban areas or Shanghai have as they too face the growing
physical, social and economic challenges that are a part of an
increasingly urbanised 21st century.
But today, amid the diversity of the world’s changing urban landscapes, on one point there should be agreement.
Liveable, dynamic and vibrant cities are greater testament to a
country’s prosperity and policy successes than any number of
skyscrapers, no matter how big or how tall. As the United States
rebuilds and cities in America and across Asia including Cambodia build
higher, it is what is sustained below that will matter most. That will
remain true in Phnom Penh no matter how high its tallest towers.
Curtis S Chin, a former US ambassador to the Asian
Development Bank, is managing director of advisory firm RiverPeak Group
LLC. Follow him on Twitter at @CurtisSChin.
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