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- Organization: Central Michigan University
- Message-ID: <930124.170525.EST.3ZLUFUR@CMUVM>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.seasia-l
- Date: Sun, 24 Jan 1993 17:05:25 EST
- Sender: Southeast Asia Discussion List <SEASIA-L@MSU.BITNET>
- From: Elliott Parker <3ZLUFUR@CMUVM.CSV.CMICH.EDU>
- Subject: TH: BKK: A new city?
- Lines: 208
-
- ======================= Forwarded Message ===========================
- Date: Sun, 24 Jan 93 22:12:33+0700
- From: Kamol Hengkietisak <kamol@ipied.tu.ac.th>
- Subject: Bangkok Post Jan 24: A new city -- Will it work?
-
-
- Relocation of the Thai capital had been contemplated more than
- once in the past. Now the need is more acute than ever with
- worsening traffic conditions and pollution problems aggravated by
- overpopulation. The Interior Ministry has now, once again,
- proposed to relocate government agencies out of Bangkok. All agree
- the timing is right, but not all agree with the thrust of the
- plan. SOMBAT RAKSAKUL and KRISSANA PARNSOONTHORN report.
-
- BUILDING a new city may be easy, but the real challenge lies in
- how to make it work. The Interior Ministry has drafted a plan to
- relocate Bangkok-based government offices to a new city, the site
- for which has not been decided yet. The plan is now awaiting
- approval from the Cabinet.
-
- The ministry is hoping that the private sector will follow suit
- and contribute to the prosperity of the new city.
-
- However, experts warn that moving the offices may be a simple
- thing to do, but attracting financial support for the new site may
- not be easy.
-
- Most city planners are concerned that the project, if left in the
- hands of Interior officials, may eventually die a quiet death
- "without really achieving any goals".
-
- They point out that Bangkok's traffic congestion and overcrowding
- problems are, in fact, a result of poor planning and lack of
- control on development.
-
- They claim that the bureaucrats mainly focus on the technical
- aspects of the problems and seek short-term solutions. The
- government needs systematic and long-term policies to these
- issues, they stress.
-
- The city planners say that instead of tackling the root cause of
- an existing problem, the bureaucrats come up with new projects.
-
- Building a new city would be like moving old problems to a new
- place, said Dr Apichat Wongkaew, president of the Thai City
- Planner Society.
-
- A new city goes against the nature of a "living city", he adds.
-
- Like a tree planted on a vast plain, the new city will soon wilt
- and die because the private sector will not follow suit as
- expected, he warns.
-
- The so-called satellite towns in some European countries such as
- England, Scotland and Sweden became "dead cities" because very few
- people lived there, said Dr Apichat who has studied sattelite
- towns for many years.
-
- A new city is also vulnerable to problems such as crime and social
- malaise.
-
- Without economic development and diversity of activities and
- culture, residents will have no incentive to live in a new city,
- Dr Apichat says.
-
- "A city needs key elements for its survival such as natural
- resources, culture, and a transportation system linking it to the
- capital," he says.
-
- The government must also pay attention to the quality of life. It
- should watch the development process closely, in particular, the
- economic, social and environmental factors, he adds.
-
- According to Manop Bhongsadhat, a lecturer in architecture at
- Chulalongkorn University, a "living city" based on a British
- principle on city-planning, should have at least a million people,
- failing which culture will not take root. If the population is
- larger, the city will become overcrowded, he says.
-
- However, Town and Country Planning director-ge e[X Charatsri
- Teepirach wants a new city that can accommodate about 100,000
- people.
-
- "The relocation of government agencies will be carried out
- gradually, step-by-step," she says.
-
- This means, says Dr Apichat, the satellite town will be "dependent
- on the capital.
-
- "Thus the government will fail to ease traffic congestion and
- overcrowding in the capital," he warns.
-
- Because a dependent satellite town will not be very far from the
- capital, "as a matter of necessity, residents will still be able
- to travel from their homes to their places of work," he says.
-
- "Some families may even buy more vehicles because the members' may
- be working at places far away from each other."
-
- Not only that, people engaged in businesses with the government
- agencies will also suffer as a result of the relocation, Dr
- Apichat adds.
-
- As for overcrowding, Decha Boonkham, president of the Thai
- Association of Landscape Architects, predicted that by year 2000,
- Thailand will have a population of about 70 million, 60 per cent
- (or 42 million) of which will live in urban areas.
-
- Bangkok's population will double and, as a result, traffic and
- overcrowding will worsen.
-
- The only way to solve the traffic problem, he says, is to stop
- people from making too many trips.
-
- "To achieve this goal, the government must build a self-contained
- city at least 100 kilometres away from Bangkok. The convenience of
- life in a new city with little traffic congestion and the distance
- will discourage people from commuting between Bangkok and their
- new work places," Mr Decha says.
-
- On decentralisation of development away from Bangkok, city
- planners generally agree that the new-city concept will accomplish
- the objective.
-
- Apart from building the new city, they suggest that the government
- should begin solving the city planning problem in Bangkok
- seriously. Monstrous cities like Bangkok, city planners point out,
- are products of poor planning and lack of control.
-
- Housing projects and commercial complexes are growing in Bangkok
- without control and the unending construction has resulted in
- serious pollution and water shortage problems, they observe.
-
- Architects only concentrate on how to beautify their designs, Dr
- Apichat says, while real estate developers are only worried about
- completing their projects. They do not take into consideration the
- adverse affects of their projects," Dr Apichat says.
-
- The serious water-shortage problem caused by national projects
- such as the Eastern Seaboard is an example of the lack of
- systematic planning.
-
- "Just one problem of water shortage alone is enough to kill the
- Eastern Seaboard project," he points out.
-
- He blames political interests of the people involved as the cause
- of poor planning.
-
- Certain politicians pushed the project with no concern for the
- environment and water resources, Dr Apichat says, "because they
- owned land in Chon Buri and Rayong provinces and its value
- increased because of the project".
-
- Dr Apichat also expressed his concern over lack of direction and
- control on real estate development in the private sector.
-
- "No one seems to be aware of the after effect of big projects such
- as the `Maung Thong Thani' housing project. It is huge, and will
- consume a large quantity of water, estimated to be about one fifth
- or one sixth the whole of Bangkok consumption. What do you think
- will happen to Bangkok's water situation in the future?," he asks.
-
- A government official, who graduated with a masters' degree in
- town planning from the United States, also expressed concern over
- the relocation plan.
-
- "Failure of such a huge project can bankrupt the government as it
- did in Brazil," he says.
-
- To relieve overcrowding in its eastern seaboard cities and to
- realise its "dynamic march to the west policy", the Brazilian
- government invests huge sum of money into building the new city of
- Brasilia. Big businesses failed to follow. Brasilia is now a "dead
- city", and the government which suffered heavy loses, has been
- unable to pay debts, the high-ranking official explains.
-
- "Government officials are basically low-income people. And only
- small businesses such as food shops and vendors, may decide to
- move to the new city. These are again low-income people," he
- says.
-
- Finally, the city will die its own death because a mix of people
- from different income groups is necessary for the survival of any
- town," the official says.
-
- A "government city" may not also lure people from Bangkok because
- it will not have enough jobs to offer, he notes.
-
- An industrial city might offer more jobs than "a government city",
- he says, adding that if the Government wants to build a city like
- Washington DC in the United States, Bangkok's old city of
- Rattanakosin Island would be the ideal site.
-
- Deputy Interior Minister Chamni Sakdiset, who oversees the
- Department of Town and Country Planning, backed the new-city
- proposal and said, it will help solve Bangkok's traffic problem.
-
- "The relocation of government agencies will be a leading flag to
- persuade other sectors to follow," he said.
-
- A high-ranking official, however, claimed that businesses in the
- area wanted to move out because their growth had been restricted
- by current regulations.
-
- Chulalongkorn's architectural lecturer Manop said a new city must
- have a major activity as an attraction. The city of Nevada in the
- middle of a desert, for example, has casinos as its main
- attraction, he said.
-