The use of GIS in informal settlement upgrading: its role and impact on the community and on local government |
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Authors: | John Abbott |
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Affiliation: | Department of Civil Engineering, University of Cape Town, Private Bag, Rondebosch 7701, South Africa |
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Abstract: | The Urban Geographical Information Systems (GIS) Group within the Department of Civil Engineering at the University of Cape Town has been coordinating a pilot informal settlement upgrading in Cape Town since 1998. The project objective has been the evolution of a model-based approach to informal settlement upgrading that is both structured and replicable. It was felt that the only way this could be achieved was through the use of a spatial data management system operated through a GIS system. The spatial database has been used for all facets of data collection and data process and forms the basis for all decision-making. Thus it covers all physical data pertaining to the site, cadastral and shack data, demographic and socio-economic data (with an in-depth review of every household) economic opportunities and physical planning and design data. The result is a comprehensive, integrated, settlement upgrading methodology that is built upon a GIS-based spatial data management framework. Such a framework is seen as the basic building block for large-scale informal settlement upgrading. |
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Keywords: | Informal settlements Upgrading methodology Community participation GIS Spatial data management |
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