Planning for Informal Urban Green Spaces in African Cities: Children’s Perception and Use in Peri-Urban Areas of Luanda, Angola
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. (In)formal Urban Green Space and Children: A Review of the Literature
2.1. Informal Urban Greenspace: Definition and Classification
2.2. Children and Urban Green Space Nexus
3. Study Context
4. Research Methodology
4.1. Research Approach
4.2. Data Analysis
5. Results
5.1. Children’s Use and Perceived Benefits of Informal Green Space
I see that these areas [IGS] have plants that can cure diseases. My parents and teacher at school mentioned this. One time they [parents] boiled the leaves of plant [from the lot] to make a drink [tea] for one relative who had fever and he got better in a day or so. So, I think the herbs are good for medicine.(Child 19, male, 12 years old)
5.2. Barriers in Children’s Access to Informal Green Spaces
Using these areas [IGS] I think of exposure to wild animals. Also, the darkness after sunset, there are no streetlights, so it is dangerous even for adults to visit these places. How can I defend myself if I cannot see?(Child 2, female, 10 years old)
5.3. Children’s Willingness to Participate in IGS Maintenance
5.4. Children’s Suggestions for Improving IGS
Lights for the streets in general and in all the places we play specially to make it safe. Change the park [abandoned park] we have down there, that has nothing to play with or enjoy anymore. I think adults can take care of animal attacks at the riverside; my mother does not let me even approach the riverside, but I know it is a beautiful venue because I see it when we pass by.(Child 3, female, 9 years old)
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Trait | Description | Reference |
---|---|---|
Liminal | Refers to situations of ‘between-ness’, hybridity or temporality. They are intermediary or ambiguous spaces that are difficult to categorize: ‘loose space’. Boundaries and limits are not clear or breached, as is the divisions between public/private and controlled/neglected are blurred. | [16,50,51,52,53,54] |
Ambivalent | They exist within the formality-informality interface—lack of clarity in land tenure, conservation, maintenance regimes, use, regulation, and legitimacy. | [49,55] |
Spontaneous | Emerge and grow unchecked and borderless. Presents a solid amount of artificial disarrangement and offhanded vegetation that permeates part or the whole space; often grow excessively with spontaneous vegetation. | [16,20] |
Management | Often depends on how people feel about it; the sense of belonging dictates how they are (un)managed: feelings of ownership, cultural beliefs, age, and level of neighbors’ surveillance. Usually little to no maintenance at all. | [20,53,56] |
Location | Spatially found in ‘leftover-spaces’ or remnant spaces. Conditioned within the social and the financial situation of the different residential zones they are situated. That is, IGS are directly related to the socio-economic conditions of surrounding residents. | [26,57] |
By-products | The outcome of changes: cycles of planning and (re)development of residential settlements. Not necessarily originated from urban decay but result from differences in time as spatial by products of policy or planning neglect. | [19,58] |
Fluid | Constantly changing in both form and growth in line with surrounding conditions and contexts. | [59] |
IGS | Examples | Description | Common Substrates |
---|---|---|---|
Street verges | Roadside verges, roundabouts, tree rings, informal trails and footpaths | Vegetated area within 5 m from street not in another IGS category; mostly maintained to prevent high and dense vegetation growth other than street trees; public access unrestricted, use restricted. | Soil, gravel, stone, concrete, asphalt |
Lots | Vacant lots, abandoned lots | Vegetated lot presently not used for residential or commercial purposes; if maintained, usually vegetation removed to ground cover; public access and use restricted. | Soil, gravel, bricks |
Gap | Gap between walls or fences | Vegetated area between two walls, fences or at their base; maintenance can be absent or intense; public access and use often restricted. | Soil, gravel |
Railway | Rail tracks, verges, stations | Vegetated area within 10 m adjacent to railway tracks not in another IGS category; usually herbicide maintenance to prevent vegetation encroachment on tracks; public access and use mostly restricted. | Soil, gravel, stone |
Brownfields | Landfill, post-use factory grounds, industrial park | Vegetated area presently not used for industrial or commercial purposes; usually no or very infrequent vegetation removal and maintenance; public access and use mostly restricted. | Soil, gravel, concrete, asphalt |
Waterside | Rivers, canals, water reservoir edges | Vegetated area within 10 m of water body not in another IGS category; occasional removal of vegetation to maintain flood protection and structural integrity; public access and use often possible with some restrictions. | Soil, stone, concrete, bricks |
Structural | Walls, fences, roofs, buildings | Overgrown human artifacts; often vertical; occasional removal of vegetation to maintain structural integrity; public access and use mostly restricted. | Soil, stone, gravel, wood, metal |
Microsite | Vegetation in cracks or holes | Vegetation assemblages in cracks, may develop into structural IGS; maintenance can be absent or intense | Deposits, soil, stone, concrete |
Power line | Powerline rights of way | Vegetated corridor under and within 25 m of power lines not in another IGS category; vegetation removed periodically to prevent high growth; public access and use mostly unrestricted. | Soil |
Kitchen garden | Small farm around a residence | A kitchen garden is where herbs and vegetables are grown around the house for household use. Since early times, a small plot close to the house has been used for growing a variety of vegetables according to the season | Soil |
Open Camp | Open spaces | Wide open spaces usually formally covered by grass that constant use or drought make them plan for different ludic kind of activities | Soil |
Code | Gender | Age | Province of Origin | Year of School |
---|---|---|---|---|
Child 1 | M | 9 years old | Luanda | 4 |
Child 2 | F | 10 years old | Luanda | 4 |
Child 3 | F | 9 years old | Luanda | 3 |
Child 4 | F | 9 years old | Moxico | 4 |
Child 5 | F | 6 years old | Luanda | 1 |
Child 6 | M | 8 years old | Luanda | NA |
Child 7 | M | 7 years old | Luanda | 2 |
Child 8 | M | 10 years old | Huambo | 5 |
Child 9 | M | 6 years old | Luanda | 1 |
Child 10 | F | 10 years old | Luanda | 5 |
Child 11 | M | 6 years old | Luanda | 1 |
Child 12 | M | 11 years old | Luanda | 6 |
Child 13 | F | 10 years old | Luanda | 5 |
Child 14 | M | 7 years old | Benguela | 2 |
Child 15 | M | 7 years old | Luanda | 2 |
Child 16 | F | 6 years old | Luanda | 1 |
Child 17 | M | 10 years old | Benguela | 5 |
Child 18 | M | 10 years old | Luanda | 5 |
Child 19 | M | 12 years old | Luanda | 6 |
Child 20 | M | 11 years old | Luanda | 6 |
Child 21 | F | 7 years old | Luanda | 2 |
Child 22 | F | 11 years old | Luanda | 5 |
Child 23 | F | 6 years old | Luanda | 1 |
Benefits | Theme Details | Count |
---|---|---|
Food | A place where you can get wild fruits and vegetables | 15 |
Recreation | Used as playground | 11 |
Use for special events and picnics | 4 | |
Ecosystem | Source of water for domestic use | 2 |
Scenery and Nature | A place for observing and enjoying nature | 6 |
Provide shade | 1 | |
Education | Serene environment to study | 1 |
Relating things taught in class with what is observed in IGS | 2 | |
Health | Source of medicinal plants | 5 |
Rest point and place for relaxation | 3 | |
Perceived health benefits | 2 | |
Economic | A place where plants and food stuff can be grown | 4 |
Barriers | Theme Details | Count |
---|---|---|
Safety concerns | Attack by wild animals | 18 |
Perceived night-time dangers | 2 | |
Trees falling | 2 | |
Unavailable streetlight | 6 | |
Crime incidences (kidnapping and robbery) | 10 | |
Stones and pits | 1 | |
Hydro-meteorological hazards | Flooding | 8 |
Bad weather (rainy seasons) | 3 | |
Maintenance and Appearance | Place not kept well and untidy | 2 |
Health and Medical issues | Mosquito bites | 1 |
Poisonous plants | 2 | |
Parental restrictions | Parents disallowing children to go alone | 5 |
Suggestion | Theme Details | Count |
---|---|---|
Improved safety conditions | Police presence at IGS | 4 |
Provision of streetlights at IGS | 8 | |
Keeping wild animals away | 5 | |
Make conditions safer at IGS | 4 | |
Enhance aesthetics and conditions of IGS | Bringing shops to IGS | 6 |
Turn the place into a zoo to keep wild animals | 4 | |
Turn the place into a planned park (i.e., formal green space) | 10 | |
Tidy and clean the place regularly | 6 | |
Provide waste bins in IGS | 3 | |
Turn some part of IGS into garden | 2 | |
Provide benches and rest point at IGS | 4 | |
Infrastructure | Improved roads leading to IGS and making available public transport to facilitate mobility to and from IGS | 3 |
Provide water facilities | 4 | |
Reduce flooding at IGS (i.e., through provision of drains) | 3 | |
Education | Provide public education and sensitization on importance of IGS and why it must be maintained | 2 |
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Pedrosa, E.L.J.; Okyere, S.A.; Frimpong, L.K.; Diko, S.K.; Commodore, T.S.; Kita, M. Planning for Informal Urban Green Spaces in African Cities: Children’s Perception and Use in Peri-Urban Areas of Luanda, Angola. Urban Sci. 2021, 5, 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci5030050
Pedrosa ELJ, Okyere SA, Frimpong LK, Diko SK, Commodore TS, Kita M. Planning for Informal Urban Green Spaces in African Cities: Children’s Perception and Use in Peri-Urban Areas of Luanda, Angola. Urban Science. 2021; 5(3):50. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci5030050
Chicago/Turabian StylePedrosa, Eurídice Lurdes Jorge, Seth Asare Okyere, Louis Kusi Frimpong, Stephen Kofi Diko, Tracy Sidney Commodore, and Michihiro Kita. 2021. "Planning for Informal Urban Green Spaces in African Cities: Children’s Perception and Use in Peri-Urban Areas of Luanda, Angola" Urban Science 5, no. 3: 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci5030050
APA StylePedrosa, E. L. J., Okyere, S. A., Frimpong, L. K., Diko, S. K., Commodore, T. S., & Kita, M. (2021). Planning for Informal Urban Green Spaces in African Cities: Children’s Perception and Use in Peri-Urban Areas of Luanda, Angola. Urban Science, 5(3), 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci5030050