Type of Publication:
Report
ISBN#: 9966-9876-2-2
Price: US$ 8
Keywords: Kenya,
Nairobi, Dandora, Housing Development, Sites and Services,
Self-Help Housing Projects,
Abstract:
This publication is based on the results of field work
undertaken by Father George McInnes during the period 1982
to 1984 on the World Bank Sites and Service Project in the
Dandora Community located on the eastern outskirts of the
City of Nairobi. The Dandora Project was innovative and experimental
in significant respects. The orginal plans for this site and
service scheme, drawn up by the Nairobi City Council with
the assistance of the World bank incorporated specific community
development strategies calculated to make housing affordabe
by promoting self-reliance and plot consolication in stages.
Such strategies were based on the experiences of urban poor
in satisfying their basic needs for shelter and sustenance
in the spontaneous settlements where they formerly lived and
worked.
This study by Father George
Moines provides a critical account of how and why these
community development strategies for the Dander project had
problems in the social and economic climate of Kenya during
the 1980s. Father McInnes under took a comprehensive household
questionnaire survey of residents in Phase 2 of the Dandora
project during 1984.
The lessons learnt from
the Dandora experience are salutary and have much wider implications.
They raise important questions for the future of urban planning
in Third World countries, answers to which may not be very
easy to apply in the current global economic climate dominated
by New Right politics.