INTA ANNUAL REPORT 2012

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CONTENT PAGE

MESSAGE FROM INTA 02-03 ABOUT INTA 04-05 MEMBERSHIP 06-07 ACTIVITIES 2012 08-09

COMMUNITIES OF COMPETENCE 10-11 -METROPOLISATION 12-15 -WORKSPACE URBANISM 16-21 -TOMORROW’S HABITAT 22-25 -INNOVATION & SERVICES 26-29 -TRANSMED 30-33 -AFRICA 34-35

ACTIVITIES 2013 36-37

more information on > http://www.inta-aivn.org

01 I am happy to present you our 2012 Annual Report.

It is a survey of what your association has been doing last year, and what are our main commitments:

Improving urban governance through a series of related events dealing with habitat, mobility, modern economy and ICT for local services. Ideas, discussions, proj- ects could be found in the Communities of Competence Habitat and Innovation and services and panels like the one in Paris La Défense on Smart City. Constructing an inclusive territorial policy with the aim to rebuild social links while our societies get more and more polarised. This means questioning the public as well as private instruments such as planning, urban forms, nature of services to the inhabitants, the place of culture in the urban projects, health and wellness provision, etc. Reflexions on metropolitan strategies (Programme InBetween Metropolitan Strate- gies) and a City for everyone (International Seminar “A City for all, made by all”) are still ongoing within the Community of Competence Metropolisation and offer plenty of opportunities to exchange on these issues. Identifying solutions to urban problems through collaborative mechanisms between various stakeholders at different territorial levels, in particular at the metropoli- tan one. Study visits of major urban projects, collective workshops on urban projects stressed out good practices for urban management (panels in Benin, , training and visits in Indian Ocean and Northern Europe). Fostering development of different tools to produce urbanity differently; for example, that implies rethinking housing and regeneration policy and make them multi- scalar levers for the establishment of a performing urban-knowledge platform. The Community of Competence TransMed has been working on these issues for the past months.

Publications from past activities give an insight into our urban perspectives. This Annual Report also allows you to download reports of each Community of Competence or of panels, and pictures, position papers from our members, etc.

INTA will work in 2013 closer to its membership through the 4 thematic axis, engaging MESSAGES members in the activities of the various Communities of Competence, with the purpose FROM INTA to foster discussion and exchange especially during crisis times when the principles of integrated urban development have to meet the reality of the urban societies. Budiarsa Sastrawinata, INTA President

02 Dear Members of INTA, MESSAGES FROM INTA The INTA secretariat is happy to present you the outcome of last year activities.

2012 has been a year of change for the Secretariat. We moved the office from The Hague, the Netherlands to Paris, France in January and have started a “new life” in the French capital. We took the opportunity to settle in a more central place to meet members more frequently.

Our Secretary General, Michel Sudarskis, Lola Davidson, the programme coordinator, and Christine Lor, Advisor to the President who is in charge of the relationship with French and French speaking members, will be more than happy to welcome you there. We have got many visits during the year 2012, French members and friends of course, but not only, we have met our members from Benin, UK, Taiwan etc. as well. We did not totally quit The Netherlands where 2 colleagues - Maranke de Krieger and Viviana Rubbo- are still working from distance maintaining strong links with our Dutch members and partners. The first semester of 2012 was dedicated to launch in a very active way our programme Objective 2030 and the Communities of Competence.

We thank you for you involvement in these Communities, and welcome those who have not yet participated in their activities. In 2012, 16 different activities were organised in collaboration with members within the Commu- nities of Competence . An interactive platform on our website allows members to interact and debate in a simple and friendly way using all the tools that technology offers. Thanks to our colleague Luis Buezo de Manzanedo, we are developing closer relationship with countries of Latin America, widening the spectrum of our membership and of possibilities of exchange of experience for our network.

Our 2012 World Urban Development Congress, INTA36, originally planned to take place in the USA, was finally held in Paris thanks to the generous support of the companies Ciputra and RATP. 2013 will be a year of continuity in terms of strategy and of programmes, while improving communication thanks to a new intern from Taiwan, keeping links with all our members and giving them more exposure. We invite you to visit our website and to contact us to suggest improvements or new issues to debate, activi- ties to plan, etc. We will be more than happy to spread the word! Best regards from the INTA Staff

Michel Sudarskis Christine Lor Luis Buezo Lola Davidson Viviana Rubbo Maranke de Krieger

03 INTA is a global membership association where public and private policy- makers and urban practitioners come together to share knowledge, experience and performing tools for integrated urban development. INTA is not a city network: it is an association of urban decision makers and practitioners. INTA is not a professional association: it is a place where plan- ners, architects, developers, engineers, investors, etc. engage with public authorities and companies, with researchers and community, economic, envi- ABOUT INTA ronmental, social and spatial stakeholders to jointly create strategies for sustainable urbanity, connecting all issues critical to the integrated develop- ment of urban territories.

04 Introduction of INTA ABOUT INTA more information on > http://www.inta-aivn.org/en/about/profile History

INTA was born in 1976 in Paris as the Interna- tional New Town Association, at a time when large-scale urban development projects were conceived in support of the general economic growth. INTA’s founders believed in the impor- Approach and areas of action tance of exchanging international experiences and know-how between all the actors involved The reach of INTA covers urban development on all in those ambitious projects reshaping territories scales, but a common thread runs through all activities: and living environment. Today, INTA’s members integration of the sectoral policies implemented by are still convinced that only by putting the public and private sectors in areas such as strategic efforts of all urban actors together, a sustainable territorial planning, public spaces,urban forms and and integrated urbanity can be attained. architecture, innovation and the knowledge economy, mobility and accessibility, local public services, new Working Method patterns of production and distribution, creative clus- ters, economic attractiveness, housing, urban regen- To facilitate the exchange of experiences and eration, heritage and tourism, social inclusion, territo- knowledge, develop cooperation between rial marketing, local governance, sustainability and public and private sectors, and build compe- energy efficiency, etc. Only when integrated, such poli- tences, INTA’s members co-produce solutions cies make it possible to reshape territories, their func- through international and regional exchanges on tions, social life and economic activities. These policies urban issues that require careful attention. are the drivers of changes for many territories, such as INTA’s International Secretariat coordinates the New Towns, neighbourhoods, municipalities, metro- network and it’s international activities: an politan areas and urban regions. Innovative Annual World Urban Development Congress, approaches are opportunities to draw up and to induce Conferences and Seminars, the World Urban new forms of dialogue and negotiation, as well as new Development Council, Prospective Round- relationships between social players, resulting in an tables, Brainstorm sessions, Study visits and effective system of urban. Advisory panels, in which a group of members advises another member institution on a particular urban project. 05 MEMBERSHIP

06 Membership of INTA MEMBERSHIP

In December 2012 INTA has 5099 members and associates in 100 countries.

Regional distribution of members and associates 2011-2012 in % of total

INTA membership is divided into 3 groups: - Strategic members - Full members - Associate members

Strategic members - Institutions with whom a special programme of activities is created to target the requirements of the members. Strategic members benefit from high visibility as INTA’s main lead partners.

Full members - Institutions or individuals that benefit from INTA’s services. Membership allows contribution to the decision-making processes of national and international urban development authorities and to receive international advice offered by other INTA members as voluntary advisory services.

Associate members - Individuals that contribute time and ideas to INTA’s network.

07 March - International round table on rethinking the urban challenges of the Mediterranean, CC TransMed, 9/3, Paris, France - INTA Governing Board meeting, 10/3, Paris, France - participation of the Monte-Carlo for new and electric energies, CC Services, 24-25/3, Monaco - participation in the UfM urban working group, CC TransMed, 28/3, Barcelona, April - International Masterclass: new town projects under the Olmos Tinajones Project, CC Metropolisation, 16/4, Lambayeque, Peru - International roundtable on cities in transition towards a green economy: habitat, energy, waste and health in South American cities, CC Services and Habitat, 17-18/4, and Province of , Peru - Study visit "Rotterdam the arrival city", Inspiring Cities, CC Metropolisation, 26-27/4, Rotterdam, the May Netherlands - Technical visits to places of connection, Learning Cities programme, CC Workspace Urbanism, 3-4/5, Bordeaux and Hamburg - International roundtable of metropolisation of large river basin, CC Metropolisation, 14-15/5, ACTIVITIES Schwechat, Vienna, Austria

2012

08 ACTIVITIES June - International roundtable on affordable housing, 2012 CC Habitat, 6/6, Paris, France - Participation at the international Jury for the renovation of Tainan Main Station area, CC Workspace Urbanism, 12-15/6, Tainan, Taiwan - International roundtable on places of connexion, Learning Cities programme, CC Workspace Urbanism, 27-29/6, Utrecht, the Netherlands September - Workshop on Smart City concept, CC Services and Workspace, 3-4/9, Paris, France - International roundtable on urban mobility and tourism, CC Services, 19-21/9, Lisbon, Portugal - International Panel on strategic thinking on urban development, CC Metropolisation, 22-29/9, Sèmè-Podji, Cotonou, Benin October - International Panel on Smart City in La Défense Seine Arche, CC Services and Workspace, 14-19/10, Paris, France December - INTA Governing Board meeting, - International seminar "A city for all, made by all", 26/10, London, United Kingdom CC Metropolisation, 5-6/12, Vaulx-en-Velin, France - Participation in the Social and Solidarity Economy Forum, 7/12, Vaulx-en-Velin, France - Participation in the 30th Anniversary of the "Cité des Etoiles" of Renaudie, 8/12, Givors, France - INTA Governing Board meeting and General Assembly, 16/12, Paris, France - INTA36 World Urban Development Congress "Suitable urban development unlocking urban value", 17-18/12, Paris, France

09 With the aim of helping its members to master the complexity OBJECTIVE of urban development and to bring a sustainable response to our society multiple needs, INTA has created the "Objective 2030" program. This program is put in place through several Communities of Competence that gather INTA's member into 2030 working platforms / thematic clusters.

OBJECTIVE 2030

10 COMMUNITIES OF COMPETENCE What are the Communities of Competence ? more information on>http://www.inta-aivn.org/en/communities-of-competence/home

The Communities of Competence develop a The Communities of Competence in 2012. specific base of experiences, knowledge and insights, feeding into the programme Objective 2030, helping to articulate the vision of INTA members on future directions in urban develop- ment and providing durable responses to the The Communities, launched in 2011 have started to be issues facing the city of tomorrow. really active last year, involving more members and devel- oping more issues to be discussed within a Community and also exchanging from one CC to another. The added value of these working groups - clusters There were 5 Communities, and a 6th one was just - is in the density of exchanges between members, created by the end of the year: their ability to share specific problems, and "test" - Metropolisation new solutions in response to the challenges of the - Workspace Urbanism future of urban development. - Innovation and services (Urban services, health, retail and tourism) How it works - Tomorrow's habitat - TransMed >Identify common challenges and explore adapted - Territories in Africa (launched in December 2012, solutions among members of the CCs; first activities are expected in 2013). >Invite members and partners to address the chal- lenges and to propose their own solutions Not less than 16 different activities were organised in (validated through a referential framework devel- collaboration with members within the Communities of oped within INTA); Competence, and many more discussions. All these exchanges have shown that there is a need to >Share international experience among members be linked to the network in a continuous way in order to of the CC and between CCs at the occasion of deepen the reflection on issues that really matter on each roundtables; territory. >Seize every opportunity of INTA activities to Many issues have crossed the boarder of one or another increase interactions between CCs; Community, joining CCs together to enrich the debate. >Publicise the work of the CC on the INTA website The following pages show the content of the work of each and through social networks and to contribute to Community. A progress report is available for each of the general programmes of the Association them.

11  

METROPOLISATION

12 METROPOLISATION CC Metropolisation

The work of the Community has defined some issues, brought others out and highlighted the capability and/or the difficulty of local actors to manage the metropolitan issues. The communitity has started to work on the following issues:

• How do we mobilize the public and private actors iand a context of increasing geographical scales? • The competitiveness of metropolitan areas What contractual exchanges between actors and involves an urban development standardiza- territories to develop a multi-partners metropolitan tion. How to attract and secure the talents on cooperation? Does metropolitan governance make a standardised territory? Which identity, what the other local levels redundant? kind of image for these territories?

• What could be the metropolitan projects? How to • Relations urban / suburban and urban / build an urban project that could be significant at rural. Which responsibilities of the metropolis metropolitan level? towards its neighbouring territories and areas of influence? • Which infrastructures for which relations among territories? Is there a risk that the pooling of infra- Several discussions,activities during the year structures produces territorial inequalities in the have approached these issues, more actions city? are to come in 2013.

13 CC Metropolisation Activities 2012 Download the progress report > http://www.inta-aivn.org/en/communities-of-competence/metropolisation/progress-report

“Olmos Tinajones Project” “Rotterdam Bright Future”

April -Olmos, Peru: April-The Netherlands: International Master class: new towns projects “study visit ’Rotterdam, the arrival city’, under the Olmos Tinajones project Inspiring Cities” “Strategic thinking "Have we reached a limit in making the city?” on urban development ”

May -Schwechat, Vienna: International roundtable on "Have we reached a limit in making the city?

September-Cotonou, Benin: METROPOLISATION “City for all made by all ! ” International Panel on strategic thinking on urban development December -Vaulx-en-Velin,France International Seminar “City for all made by all ! The future of social contract in the scattered city”

14 METROPOLISATION “INTA36 World Urban Development Congress” December-Paris, France: "Metropolitan strategy: towards a productive metropolis?" Plenary Session at INTA36 in Paris"

Jacques Gally, senior expert on New Towns, France Jean-Philippe MOTTE Vice President in charge of Habitat, Housing and Animators Travelling people (Roms) Grenoble Alpes Metropole, France Paul Gerretsen, Deltametropool, The Netherlands Joep de Roo, Founder and Director of Eurodite, Romania Jeroen Laven, STIPO,The Netherlands Julie HARS City of Brignoles, France Rupert Kawka, Bundesinstitut für Bau-, Stadt- und Raumforschung, Bonn,Germany Juan Pablo Puy, Arquitect-Urbanist, IDOM – Bilbao, Spain Livia Morega, Urban planner at Eurodite, Romania Partners and speakers in 2012 events Luis Buezo de Manzanedo Sociologist, INTA - Latin America Ahmed Zaib Khan Mahsud, Urban design and Planner, Cosmopolis, Belgium Luis Tagle, Director of the National Planning Department, Peru Alfonso Martínez, Director Bilbao Metropolí 30, Spain Marek Dinka, Geographer and spatial planner,December City of Bratislava, Slovakia Alianza Francesa de Chiclayo, Peru Markus Damm, Responsible for the managementParis,France of the City Network DonauHanse at Tina Anaïk Purenne Researcher Lab RIVES, ENTPE, UNESCO Chair 'Urban policies and Vienna, Austria citizenship', France Markus Vogl, querkraft architekten zt gmbh, Austria and Urban Planning, Benin Martial Passi, Mayor Municipality of Givors, France Bert McClure, urban planner, France Maurice Charrier, Vice-President in charge of urban policy and social cohesion Grand Lyon, Carlo Spinelli, Urban Center metropolitano, Turin, Italy France Central European Institute of Technology, Schwechat, Austria Metropolis Association, Spain Centre for Urban Research, Cosmopolis, University of Brussels, Belgium Metropolitan Grenoble, France Charles Lin Deputy Mayor Tainan City Tainan City, Taiwan Miguel Prialé Ugas, CEO Municipal highway enterprise Lima Metropolitana, Peru Christopher De Vries, European Infrastructure Laboratory, The Netherlands Municipality of the Olmos District, Peru City of Malmö, Sweden Natalia Chinchilla, Arquitect Partner of EB+U, Madrid, Spain City of Vaulx-en-Velin, France Noud Fransen, Infrastructure and Planning Department, Government of Aruba, Dutch Antilles Colegio de Arquitectos, Peru Pablo Vega Centeno, Professor Pontifical Catholic University of Peru, Peru Colegio de Ingenieros, Peru Paul Gerretsen, Director Deltametropool Association,The Netherlands Cundinamarca Capital Region, Colombia PEOT, Le Proyecto Especial Olmos Tinajones, Peru Cundinamarca Lima Nord, Peru Philippe Serizier, Senior Expert, Programme LEED – OCDE, France Darko Polic, City of Novi Sad, Serbia Pietro Elisei, Town and Regional Planner, founder and director of URBASOFIA, Romania Émilie DORé Sociologist, France Pingki Elka Pangestu, Director PT Loka Mampang Indah Realty Jakarta, Indonesia Enoc Gouroubera Deputy private Secretary to the Benin Ministry of the Decentralisation Plaine de France, France ENSAL (National School of architecture of Lyon), France Pranee Nantasenamat, Senior Expert in town and country planning, Ministry of ENTPE (National School of Public Works of the State), France Province South Holland, Netherlands Éric CHARMES Director Lab RIVES, ENTPE, UNESCO Chair 'Urban policies and RealCorp, Austria citizenship', France Regional government of Lambayeque, Peru Faudziah Ibrahim, Head Division, Development KLCC Property Holdings Berhad, Kuala Roy Adams OBE, urban planning and development consultant, London, UK Lumpur, Malaysia Séverin Nsia Director Delegate for the Territorial Planning Ministry for the Decentralisation, François COUTEL project leader National Council of Cities, France Benin Françoise Coupé, Professor at Colombian National University and President of the Thomas Kiwitt, Managing Director Verband Region Stuttgart (Regional planning commission), Urban territorial Council of Medellin, Colombia Germany Françoise LE LAY Project Manager Bordeaux Métropole 3.0 Bordeaux Urban District, UNESCO Chair Urban policies and citizenship, France Innovation and Metropolitan Strategies, France Universidad Nacional Pedro Ruíz Gallo, Peru Gabriel Pascariu, architect and planner, Romania Urban District of Bordeaux, France Group Eiffage, France Urban Planning Agency of Metropolitan Grenoble, France H2Olmos-Odebrecht, Peru Urban Planning Institute of Ile-de France Region, France Han Meyer professor in Theory and Methods of Urban Design at the Technological Vincent Fouchier, Deputy Director IAU-IF IAU-IF, France University Delft, The Netherlands Virgilio Acuña Peralta, Peruvian MP, Lima Metropolitana government, Peru Interior Department of Town and Country Planning, Bangkok, Thailand Volkmar Pamer, Urban Planner, Municipal Department for District Planning and Land Use Jaap MODDER Chairman Board of Directors Arnhem Nijmegen City Region, South and Northeast, City of Vienna, Austria The Netherlands 15  

WORKSPACE URBANISM

16 WORKSPACE CC Workspace Urbanism URBANISM

Work patterns and production patterns are changing in cities around the world as a conse- quence of far-reaching development in technol- ogy, demography, and globalized economy. Globalization and the service sector of the Several activities,especially on places economy were to develop new industrial and of connection (mobility hubs,train stations) work models and work as best suited to the and on urban smartness have raised the previous knowledge-led economy. Labour flexibility, issues linking knowledge-economy to a new clusters, dynamic reorganization, mixed uses, urban paradigm. creative incubators, transport and exchange infrastructures as economic and mobility hubs, we are witnessing profound changes in doing • In which ways will developments in ICT influence and working patterns. Also a preference of future physical location patterns of workplaces? companies for another type of workspace can be observed, workspace with multifunctional • How can we better integrate workspaces into social spaces dedicated to human interactions, urban (mobility) functions? better integrated in the urban pattern and closer to mobility hubs. • How can various production spaces be more efficiently linked? Combined with the imperative of sustainability and the current financial context, these chang- • What are new (architectural) design parameters? ing patterns of work are beginning to alter our (use of the) built environment as well as the rela- • How can urban planners prepare for changing tion between economic and spatial planning. demand for workspaces?

The Community of Competence (CC) on Work- • What are potential new functions for obsolete space Urbanism, departing from new under- production facilities? standings on the urbanization process in a knowledge economy, works together with its • Which opportunities does it bring for the larger members (local governments, private compa- metropolitan region? How is this changing the nies, academics, development agencies...) to conventional relation between centre and find integrated and practical solutions to these peripery? strategic questions.

17 CC Workspace Urbanism Activities 2012 Download the progress report > http://www.inta-aivn.org/en/communities-of-competence/urbanism/progress-report "Learning Cities Program" "Tainan Main Station Renovation"

May-Hamburg,Bordeaux: Technical visits to places of June- Tainan, Taiwan: connection, Learning Cities Participation at the international Jury programme. for the renovation of Tainan Main Station Area

"Managing Urban Change in Places of Connection" "Strategic thinking on urban development"

WORKSPACE June- Utrecht, The Netherlands: URBANISM International roundtable Learning Cities. September-Cotonou, Benin: Managing Urban Change in Places of Connection International panel on “Strategic thinking on urban development ”

18 WORKSPACE URBANISM "Smart City Workshop” "INTA 36 World Urban Development Congress"

September-Paris, France: Workshop on Smart City concept

December - Paris, France: “Can the re-engineered city meet the urban economic challenge?” Plenary Session at INTA36 Congress in Paris. "Smart City in La Défense "

 October-La Défense, Paris, France: International panel on Smart City in Paris La Défense – Seine Arche 

19 CC Workspace Urbanism Activities 2012

Animators: Lawrence Barth, Professor, Habitat and Urbanism, Graduate School of Architectural Association, London, UK Charles Lin, Professor, University NCU and Deputy Mayor of Tainan,Taiwan Rémi Feredj, Director Real Estate, RATP, Paris, France

Partners and speakers in 2012 events: Allard Jacquin Philippe Smart City Thales Communications Cormier Olivier Director Projets Development GE Corpo- & Security SA, France rate, France AFIN (Asociación para el Fomento de la Infraestructura Davidson Lola Programme Coordiantor INTA Nacional), Peru DEGW, and Academy of Urbanism, London, UK Balch Christopher Plymouth University, UK Delpont André Deputy Director Euratlantique, Bordeaux, Bas Vendrig Senior Assistant HKB Urbanists, Rotterdam, France The Netherlands Disle Antoine co-founder Rockzaline, France Berends Han Director ProRail State, Utrecht, Netherlands Dock Marianne Architect City of Malmö, Sweden Best John John Best Re.Generation, UK Doyle Kevin Programme Manager Cardiff, UK Betis Gilles Smart City & Mobility Solution Leader Thalés, Dupouy Laurence-Marine Smart City, CUB, France France Evanno Stéphane Vice-President, Business Development Birgi Julien Coordinator Euratlantique, Bordeaux, France electrification, Mobility, Smart City, Bosch, France Bouwman Henk Expert UrbanimPulse/ Academy of Frid Ane Jacobsen Moster Infra & Urban Planning City of Urbanism,The Netherlands Oslo, Norway Bruns-Berentelg Juergen Director HafenCity, Germany Gagnon Chantal, Montréal City Council, Canada Bühler Susanne Head Marketing HafenCity, Germany Gaucherand Aurelien , Groupe Evolution, France Butter Peter Butterworks oy Helsinki, Finland Gauthier Biaou Cotonou, Benin Carbonel Fabrice Bosch, France Geilenkeuser Tim Ass. To executives,HafenCity,Germany Center for Culture, Media and Creative Industries, King's Ger Baron Smart City programme, Amsterdamse Innova- Cross College, London, UK tive Motor, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Christer Larsson Director of City Planning, City of Glare Francis BDP, Manchester, UK Malmo, Sweden Groener Gerard CEO Corio,The Netherlands City of Cardiff, UK Group Eiffage, France WORKSPACEWORKSPACECity Planning Department of Le Port, Group GDF SUEZ, France URBANISM Reunion Island, France HafenCity, Hamburg, Germany URBANISM City Planning Department of Malmö, Halinen Kari Managing Director, Art and design City of Sweden Helsinki, Finland City Planning Department of Hoftun Silje Infra & Urban planning City of Oslo, Norway Tallinn, Estonia Houssou David, Cotonou, Benin

20 WORKSPACE Hutschemaekers Albert director, Utrecht Stationsgebied, The Panos Mantzarias Ministry of Netherlands Culture, Paris, France URBANISM Juan Murillo Arias Innovation centre BBVA, Spain Plaindoux Pierre Deputy director, Kaiser Martin Director Roadmap Solutions Services Bouygues sustainable development, EPADESA, Telecom , France France Lacire Servan Director Innovation & Technologies - Pole Planning Agency of Metropolitan Grenoble, Energy & Services - ETDE, France France Lambourg Anne CUB, France Polkowski Dieter dept. Urban Planning, HafenCity, Lamontre Christophe Director Valuation, purchasing and Germany logistics Department RATP, France Prosper Sédégnan Kedagni Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso Laousse Dominique Responsible "Innovation & Prospective" Racine Bruno, expert ETD (Entreprises, Territoires & Group SNCF, France Développement), member of CohesioNet, France Laurens Versluis assistant SpaceSyntax, London, UK RATP (Régie des Transports de Paris), Paris, France Lawrence Barth Architectural Association, London, UK Raynaud Brigitte Secretary General National Council of Lawrence Revill Managing Director Milton Keynes, UK Cities, France Lin Charles Deputy Mayor Tainan City Tainan City, Taiwan Rigaudy Jean-Baptiste Director Urban Planning, CUB, Lindhe Stefan Vice Chairman of the Board, City if Malmo, France Sweden Rose Anna Expert SpaceSyntax, London, UK Lor Christine INTA Rose Jonathan consultant AECOM for Cardiff, UK Lourdin Didier Director Sustainable Development, EPADESA, Rubbo Viviana INTA, France France S333, Architecture and Urbanism, London and Amsterdam Markku Karislahti Pöyry, Finland Santaki Rachid Writer, France Martial Passi Mayor of Givors, France Seidou Mako Imorou, Cotounou, Benin Marzloff Bruno Director General Chronos/La Cité des Seme-Podji City Council, Benin services, France SGH, University of Warsaw, Poland Mikko Leinonen Director NCC Property Development, Finland Sudarskis Michel Secretary general, INTA, France Mohammed Diop, Dakar, Senegal Svensson Carina Chairman of the Board of City Planning, Montillot Florent, City of Orléans, France City of Malmo, Sweden Nédelec Serge in charge of social cohesion and integration at Tenhunen Tero City planner City of Tampere, Finland the Ministry of Urban Policies, France Ulmer Jean-Christophe, Urban district of Bordeaux, France Neil Hanratty Chief Officer CityDevelopment City of Cardiff, Uotila Juha A-Insinöörit Techn. Advisor, Finland United Kingdom Vauge Christian Consultant ENR & DD, France Niemi Olli Adjunct Professor R&D University Properties, Verpeaux Cedric, Responsible pole "Smart city and Finland sustainability", CDC, France Noisette Francois Special Advisor, CUB, France Vincent Bui CUB, France Nordic City Network Whyte Iain,Paris, France Oetdzge Atzema University of Utrecht, The Netherlands Worthington John Expert Academy of Urbanism, London, Okou Christophe, Cotounou, Benin United Kingdom

21 H 2030

TOMORROWʼS

HABITAT

22 TOMORROWʼS CC Tomorrow’s Habitat HABITAT The current economic environment, including the weakening financial situation where public poli- • Could the informal settlements in cies are not anymore necessarily assured, brings emerging countries be developed in members and partners of INTA questioning about the industrialized countries when the suc- the new levers of territorial action in particular as cessive crises are likely to make the issue regards the topic of affordable housing and habi- real for many people? tat. The production of land property is highly • How to produce land for affordable housing? debated in the advanced countries - where • What financial dynamics to meet the need of public policies have a central role in the produc- future investment in affordable housing? tion of housing especially for the less advantaged • What interactions between housing demand and classes - or in emerging countries, especially other urban services (mobility, workspace,retail, tropical and sub-tropical areas where the health, energy, water, waste, etc.) as part of an inte- responses to the demand for housing do not grated urban development? necessarily fit in a regulated framework. • How can we change the design and shape of housing (flexibility)? In response to these questions, Communitity of • What changes in working practices for those Compentence ”Habitat for Tomorrow”serves as a involved in construction? platform for communication and exchange of • What role for private companies that contribute to experiences & strategies searching for solutions the production of the city and the building process to the questions "how we will live tomorrow and of dwellings? how we will be accommodated". • What innovations in the construction in terms of processes and materials (eco construction,self- The first thoughts of this Community of Compe- construction)? tence led to place the debate on two levels: habitat and housing. As habitat, we refer to the Activities within the community have been oriented, way of living, and, far beyond the technical solu- on one hand towards developing countries where tions (self-construction, eco-construction, mate- housing policies are still very weak and on the other rials, modularity and units' flexibility) or the public hand, towards housing public policies but not only policies (housing finance, landownership produc- with a social housing policy approach. tion, social mix), to all that makes "living together". Housing is the way to make possible These discussions will go on, themes will some- to "live together". times merge to put inputs from each other during next year's activities. The Community of Competence already identi- fied a number of issues:

23 CC Tomorrows’ Habitat Activities 2012 Download the progress report > http://www.inta-aivn.org/en/communities-of-competence/habitat/progress-report "Cities in transition towards a green economy:"

"Affordable housing” round table

April -Lima and Province of Piura, Peru: International round table on cities in transition towards a green economy: habitat, energy, waste and health in June- Paris, France: South-American cities. International round table on affordable housing .

"INTA 36 World Urban Development Congress" December- Paris, France : “A New Economy for a New Habitat”Plenary Session at INTA36 World Urban TOMORROW’SDevelopment Congress

HABITAT

24 TOMORROWʼS

HABITAT Animators Maurice Charrier, Vice President Grand Lyon, France Michael Gahagan,former Director for Housing, Department of the Environment, London, United Kingdom Rémi Feredj, Purchasing Director, Real Estate and Logistics, RATP, Paris, France Partners and speakers in 2012 events: Anne Gerstlé, Urban Dynamics Pole Bordeaux Urban District, Bordeaux, France Arnaud de Cambière, Deputy Director, Regional Office of the CDC, Île de France Attila Cheyssial, School of Fine Arts of Reunion Island, Reunion Island, France Brigitte Raynaud Secretary General National Council of Cities, France Christine Lor, INTA,France City of Vaux-en-Velin, France COFHUAT, French Federation for Housing and Planning, France Eduardo MENESES, City of Vaulx-en-Velin, France Emmanuel Fournier, Deputy Director for Development, Spie Batignoles, France Françoise Coupé, National University of Columbia at Medellin, Colombia Jean-Philippe Motte, Vice President, Grenoble-Alpes Métropole, France Jeroen Laven, Stipo, Rotterdam, The Netherlands Le Port City Council, La Reunion, France Louis Henry, Architect, Urban policies and urban development CDC, France Marc Brabant, Director, Logistransports, Paris, France Marek Bryx, Profesor of Economics, Warsaw School of Economics, Poland Matt Leach, Housing Associations Charitable Trust (Hact), London, United Kingdom Maurice Charrier Vice president Grand Lyon, France Michael Gahagan, former Director for Housing, Department of the Environment, London, United Kingdom Pascal Dayre, France Patrick Rheinert, architect, Germany & France Rémi Feredj, Director, Real Estate and Logistics, RATP, Paris, France H Sylvie Vandenberghe, Director GIE LogiDev, France 2030

25  

INNOVATION & SERVICES

26 INNOVATION CC Innovation & Services & SERVICES

New challenges are emerging in urban and territorial development: the evolution of individual and collective Retail: shopping mall are empty- values, lifestyles, security, green economy, techno- ing, new behaviours are rising logical risks, economic competition, segregation and (internet shopping, late opening city integration, new mobility, entry of new players in urban centre shops) that raise the question of development, urban growth but shrinking cities, and commercial planning, delivery systems and need of new governance arrangements with stronger logistic areas. involvement of the inhabitants. Urban services: waste, water management and The mature economies are witnessing a major shift of energy are basic services that are, with innovation into employment into service-led activities and a continu- local production networks, subject to new processes in ous stream of innovation into the tertiary sector. developed and developing countries. New markets are Changes in the service-led economy - including the opening and new stakeholders are emerging. content and delivery of universal services such as health, education, welfare, basic urban services - question the capacity and the place of the State and •How will patterns for urban services continue to change, of local governments in the provision of these how can service's providers respond and what are the services, and thus social equity. Furthermore, the consequences on the sustainability of the urban develop- trends towards the decentralised nature of services, ment process? like transport, energy, waste collection, retail and •What are the key trends at work that shape the patterns health, impact the nature of urban development. In for urban services? such a rapidly changing economic and technological •What are the relevant respective combinations of trends context, urban stakeholders (service providers, local that affect the 4 sectors? governments) are looking to more options to deliver •Are these trends sufficiently acknowledged by urban quality services to the inhabitants.. policy makers and planners; are best practices of forward thinking in the public sector available and what can we INTA members and partners have identified 4 critical learn? areas being subjects to change under the pressure of innovation, of changing demand and of new •What is the (new) interplay between changing patterns approaches to sustainable development, urban for urban services and new demand for housing? “smartness” being a new trend. •How should urban service providers (shopping mall developers/owners, healthcare providers, hotel chains, Tourism sector as a major services provider, and as etc.) respond to the trend of concentration and speciali- an economic leverage for economic development, is sation and achieve optimal use (e.g. strategies for avoid- moving rapidly under the effects of information ing excessive vacancy)? technology, new modes of travelling, new demands •What are the consequences of accelerating connectivity for leisure. (via increased mobility and internet-use) and how can we better connect the built environment with the virtual envi- Health: the ageing population in many part of the ronment? industrialised world questions the links between •What sort of new alliances can we form to achieve territory, accessibility, disability, and innovation for higher levels of urban services provision? medical and para-medical care. 27 CC Innovation & Services Activities 2012 Download the progress report > http://www.inta-aivn.org/en/communities-of-competence/services/progress-report "Monte Carlo Rally for new and electric energies" "Urban mobility and tourism"

March - Monaco - participation at the Monte Carlo Rally for new and electric energies

September-Lisbon, Portugal International round table on mobility and tourism "INTA 36 World Urban Development Congress" December- Paris, France “Can the re-engineered city meet the urban economic challenge?”&“Rediscovering mobility” Plenary Sessions at INTA36 Congress in Paris.

"Cities in transition towards a green economy"

INNOVATION & SERVICES April -Lima and Province of Piura, Peru - International round table on cities in transition towards a green economy: habitat, energy, waste and health in South-American cities

28 INNOVATION Animators Retail: Pascal Carré, Constructa Promotion ,France & SERVICES Tourism: Philippe Jean Pierre, University of La Réunion, Agorah Urban services: Olivier Cormier, GE International, France Health: Robert Cadalbert et Brigitte Berthomieu, Saint Quentin en Yvelines, France

Partners and speakers in 2012 events: Jorge Camino, Mayor of Sullana, Piura ,Peru Albina Ruíz, President of Ciudad Saludable Group,Peru Jorge Rochabrunt, CEO Ciudad Saludable ,Peru Alfonso Martínez, Director Bilbao Metropolí 30,Spain Jorge Timaná, Director of the Civil Engineering Master, Automobile Club de Monaco University of Piura ,Peru Bertrand PORQUET Vice President - Sustainable Urban Manage- Jorge UMBELINO Professor Estoril Tourism School ,Portugal ment GDF Suez ,France José Humberto Montes Chávez, Chairman DISTRILUZ ,Peru Beware ,Portugal Josep maria SALANOVA GRAU Associate researcher Hellenic Boost innovation,Portugal Institute of Transport - Center for Research and Technology Branca NEVES architect advisor of deputy mayor CML ,Portugal Hellas,Greece Carl NIELSEN Founder & Chairman Cleardrive ,Denmark Juan Narciso Chavez, Director of Environmental Quality, Ministry of Christine Lor ,France Environment ,Peru Ciudad Saludable,Peru Juan Pablo Puy, Arquitect-Urbanist, IDOM – Bilbao ,Spain Claudia Hoshino, Director UNCRD-LAC,Colombia Juan Tapia, Chairman Protransporte, Lima ,Peru David Kooris, Vicepresident RPA - Regional Planning Association, Leopoldo Villacorta, Dean, School of Architecture of Piura ,Peru New York ,USA Lisbon city council ,Portugal Diego Restrepo, Director General Housing and Habitat Institute of Marcelino MORENO Managing Director BEWARE ,Portugal Medellin ,Colombia Mario Daniel Marcelo Aldana, Professor Faculty of Engineering, Dominique LAOUSSE Innovation and Prospective's group Manager University of Piura Direction Innovation&Research, SNCF ,France Mark ALTY Strategy & Development Officer City of York Edouard DOVILLAIRE,Expert Transport Urbain POMA Group,France Council,United Kingdom Elaine TRIMBLE Director of Urban Infrastructure, Urban Develop- Maurice Charrier, Vicepresident, Greater Lyon ,France ment Siemens plc ,United Kingdom Michel Sudarskis, Secretary General INTA ,France Enrique Bardaji, Arquitect,Director of E.Bardají & Asoc. Madrid,Spain Natalia Chinchilla, Arquitect Partner of EB+U, Madrid ,Spain Ernesto Gasco, Vice Minister of Transporte, Basque Country Nicola FRANCIS London 2012 Active Travel programme manager Government London 2012 ,United Kingdom Françoise Coupé, President Territorial Planning Council of Nicolás Kusunoki, President of the Mancomunidad de Lima Medellin,Colombia Norte,Peru GODE ,Peru Noud Fransen, Infrastructure and Planning Department, Government Guillermo Asprilla, Director Public Services Department, Bogota City of Aruba council,Colombia Philippe SAJHAU Vice President - Smarter Cities Growth Initiatives Hipólito BETTENCOURT Landscape architect ,Portugal IBM France ,France Ineo, GDF-Suez Group Philippe Serizier, Senior Expert, Programme LEED – OCDE Jacques Gally, Senior expert on New Towns ,France Region Piura ,Peru Javier Atkins, President of Piura Region ,Peru Rhône Alpes Tourisme ,France João FIGUEIRA DE SOUSA Assistant Professor Department of Sarah LAVAUX Sustainable Development Engineer Groupe Geography and Regional Planning Faculty of Social Sciences and Eiffage,France Humanities, New ,Portugal Vitor COSTA Executive Director ATL - Lisbon Tourism Jordi HENRICH Architect Jordi Henrich Arquitecte ,Spain Association,Portugal

29 T 2030

TRANSMED

30 CC Transmed TRANSMED

TransMed is a platform to co-produce new ways • Developing the middle for the urban development of Mediterranean size cities is essential to rebal- territories; that implies setting a shared strategic ance the costal territories, thus vision on territorial issues leading to the identifi- limiting the development of (mega) cation of the nature, types, priorities, and the cities. Also important is to think the scale of projects that could attract public or hinterland, the rural areas in relation to private investment. coastal urbanization.

TransMed started with a roundtable in Paris on • Creating economic value requires to chose March 2012, organized with the Vice Presidency between industrialisation and digital economy; of the Union for the Mediterranean (UfM) on however there is a lack of instruments to create "rethinking the urban challenge of the Mediter- economic value to finance infrastructure and ranean". basic urban services from which to build a new urban policy. The discussion led to a set of principles that could guide the balanced - therefore sustainable • Sustainable governance of the urban project - development of these territories and the prior- implies a role for civil society in designing the ity actions to implement. urban project as well as more autonomy for the territories. • No sustainable development without vision, planning, dialogue and partnership; The urban • Large scale infrastructure are accelerator of sus- challenge of the Mediterranean implies also tainable urban development; however choice has reformulating the concepts of sustainable devel- to be made on priority investments to accelerate opment to make them attainable and realist. the development: education, R & D, manufactur- ing, services, mobility, environment,...). • Liberalism in urban development reached its limits; there is a need to introduce new • The passage of a growth policy (the utilitarian approach to planning with the purpose to regu- city) to a development policy (the inclusive and late the production and the price of land and to economically sustainable city) is not easy as there return the making of the city to legality - absorp- is no predefined optimum level of urban develop- tion of illegal or informal housing, limiting the ment for the Mediterranean, nor criteria for choos- privatization of public goods and services, etc. ing projects with maximum social and environ- mental efficiency.

31 CC Transmed Activities 2012 Download the progress report > http://www.inta-aivn.org/en/communities-of-competence/transmed/progress-report "UFM Working group" "Transmed Roundtable"

March -Barcelona, Spain : March - Paris, France: International Round Table participation at the UfM urban working on "rethinking the urban challenge of the Medi- group terranean"

"INTA 36 World Urban Development Congress"

December - Paris, France: “Shaping sustainable economic and urban development of the Mediterranean TRANSMED – Smart tourism” Plenary Session at INTA36 Congress

32 TRANSMED Animators:

Christian Grusq, President, Diplomacy and Sustainable Development,France Henry Chabert, advisor on urban regeneration,France Mohamed Mbarki, CEO, Development Agency for the Eastern region of Morocco Partners and speakers in 2012 events:

Abdellah Lehzam, Rabat, Morocco Assane Mahamane, Cotonou, Bénin Christine Lor, INTA,France Fatiha Belmessous, ENTPE, Vaulx en Velin, France Fernando Nunez Da Silva, Lisboa, Portugal Francis Neher, INTA,Paris, France Gérard Benhamou,Paris, France Gilles Pennequin,Mission de la vice présidence française de l'UpM,Paris,France Guy FLEURET, senior advisor Union for the Mediterranean,Barcelona,Spain Henry Chabert, Lyon,France Iman Benkirane, Morocco Jean-Claude TOURRET General Manager Institut de la Mediterranee,Marseille,France Joseph Tossavi, Cotonou, Benin Julia JORDAN, Chargée de mission villes et littoral DATAR, Paris,France Mauro Parilli, Genova, Italy Michèle Medvedowsky, Datar,Paris,France Mohamed Mbarki, Oriental Agency,Morocco Patrick Barraquand, Mission de la vice présidence française de l'UpM,France Robert Orou Yorouba, Cotonou, Benin Roy Adams, Entity partnership, London, United Kingdom Saffet Ozdemir, YYD-Tala, Turkey Samy Ayadi, jurist, Paris,France Séverin Nsia, Cotonou, Benin Sylvain Houpin, Plan Bleu, Sophia Antipolis, France T Tariq Kabbage, Mayor of Agadir, Morocco Victor Said, IAU IF, Paris, France Ylan Catan, Swiss Life Bank, Paris, France 2030

33 AFRICA

34 CC Africa AFRICA

The time has come to develop a tool to capitalize on the layers of experience of INTA and its mem- bers, but also to bring back to other INTA mem- bers what is thought and what is being done in West Africa and more widely in sub-Saharan Africa. Capitalising on the recently created dynamics Specifically, we have created, in close partnership with the panel and seminar in Sèmè-Podji, we with our members in Benin who are strongly believe that this Forum “Territories in Africa” involved in INTA network, especially the Delega- could be articulated around two main themes: tion for Regional Planning (DAT), the House of Local Authorities (MCL) and the Observatory of Urban development and planning and local gov- Governance and Decentralization (OGoLD), a ernance and decentralization. Each of these Forum called “Territories in Africa”, an open and themes has already supporting tools in Benin, interactive space that could facilitate the sharing the DAT for the first theme, and the MCL and of experiences but also co-coproduce technical OGoLD for the second one. solutions in the field of urban development and planning, decentralization and local governance. Forum “Territories in Africa” will take the form of an INTA Community of Competence that will mobilize practitioners and networks first of Benin, followed by the sub-region of West Africa (Togo, Cameroon, Gabon, Burkina Faso, Niger, Mali, Ivory Coast, Senegal, Nigeria, Ghana, etc.), and finally other African regions.

35 ACTIVITIES

2013

36 INTA'S PROVISIONAL PROGRAMME 2013 ACTIVITIES

January 2013 CCMetropolisation- 20-26 January: Grand Lyon, France, International panel focused on the repositioning of the South West polarity of Lyon metropolitan area. CCServices- 28 - 31 January: Eco-urban Projects and urban project management, Study visit organized for Mayors from Reunion island to Hamburg (HafenCity), April Copenhagen and Malmo and in Paris region to Saint- Study tour for a Taiwanese delegation to La Défense Quentin-en-Yvelines and Plaine Commune. CBD area, Paris, France.

February June CCServices – 9-14 February: International workshop on CCMetropolisation and Workspace: Second phase eco-urban projects and management of major urban International panel on the design of a new neighbour- projects, TCO, Reunion Island, France hood at Xin Zhuang, Taipei, Taiwan. CCHabitat– 14-16 February: International seminar on CCMetropolisation: 3rd phase of IN-between substandard housing in Reunion Island, France Programme. International Roundtable in Brussels, CCTransMed– 22 February: Urban working group of the Belgium. UfM, Barcelona, Spain. Participation in the organization of an African Urban Infrastructures Initiative (UII) of the World Business March Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD). CCMetropolisation– 2-9 March: International Panel on territorial planning in the Andean region of Apurimac in July the city of Andahuaylas, Peru. CCServices – health - 8-10 July: Wellbeing and urban -16 - 18 March: Participation in the NAHRO Confer- development, Saint-Quentin en Yvelines, France. ence, Washington D.C., U.S.A. CCMetropolisation- 21 March: 2nd phase of IN- November between Programme. Participation in 5Plus City Forum, INTA37: World Urban Development Congress on Issy les Moulineaux, France. Urban Values. CCMetropolisation and Workspace – 23-28 March. 1st International Panel on economic and territorial devel- phase International panel on the design of a new neigh- opment in the intermunicipality of North Lima, Peru. bourhoodat Xin Zhuang. Taipei, Taiwan. 2013 Global Mayors’ Forum, “Live a life of health and

sustainability”. Shenzhen, China.

Updated programme on> http://www.inta-aivn.org/en/activities/activities/activities-2013

37 Thank you for supporting INTA. See you in 2013!

Thank you for supporting INTA. See you in 2013 !

International Urban Development Association Association Internationale du Développment Urbain

18 rue Daval 75011 Paris, France Office contact: + 33 1 58 30 34 52 Membership and secretariat: +31 6 34 02 90 45 Email:. [email protected] Website: www.inta-aivn.org