Showing posts with label urban planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label urban planning. Show all posts

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Vina Projects boosts urban planning services

Vina Projects CEO and GD Paul James (L) and his assistant James Chew (2nd, L) present a model of Thu Thiem New Urban Area in HCMC to local reporters during the press conference on Tuesday - Photo: Kinh Luan
HCMC – Vina Projects is looking to further penetrate the fast growing Vietnamese market through a range of services, especially consultancy on urban planning.

Vina Projects is a joint venture between VinaCapital with a 50% stake and inProjects Group, a Hong Kong provider of services for the retail, leisure and hospitality sectors.The CEO and general manager of Vina Projects, Paul James, told reporters on Tuesday that his company provides seven core services including urban planning, retail tenant coordination, project consultancy /hospitality, and management for project, construction, facilities and program.

Vietnam is urbanizing at a fast rate which may reach 45% in 2020 from 28% in 1999, he said. “Professional urban planning services are needed to ensure that new urban areas are planned properly.”

Vina Projects, which got an investment license in December last year, has 20 contracts for project /construction management, 10 for urban planning, and one for facility management.

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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Land reserve will help douse property fevers: experts

HANOI – Experts and officials at a seminar on urban development in Hanoi on Saturday called for a new approach to urbanization management in the capital city by increasing land reserves to choke off property fevers there.

Pham Sy Liem, director of the Urban Research and Infrastructure Development Institute, remarked that land fevers often took place soon after any urban planning schemes were announced. Recent fevers in new urban areas of Duong Noi, An Khanh, and even in the farming area of Ba Vi indicated that current urban land management has failed, he said.

“Therefore, to fight land manipulators and to make the most from land for development, urban administrators need to build up land reserves right at the time they make any urban planning scheme,” Liem told the seminar.

He asserted that land reserves would provide a strong vehicle for the urban administrator to manage the property market in urban areas, adding “it is high time the country formulate a complete institutional mechanism on land reserves.”

The new mechanism, according to Liem, will help prevent the situation of land prices being chased up year after year while people affected by development projects are still unhappy with the rising compensations.

Duong Duc Tuan, deputy director of Hanoi City’s Department of Planning and Architecture, agreed to Liem’s viewpoint, saying land reserves were the basic resource for urban development in the capital city.

Those areas with ample land reserves would have better conditions for infrastructure development, especially for projects under the forms of Build-Transfer and Build-Operate-Transfer forms, he said.

Dang Hung Vo, former Deputy Minister of Natural Resources and Environment, stressed the need to improve land management to avoid corruption in the sector.

“We must look for strong methods to manage land under planning schemes, otherwise some people will gain hefty profits from land manipulation while others will suffer when their land is revoked for development projects,” Vo said.

He added that urban land must be seen as capital resources, so a right approach to urban planning would be the decisive factor to determine urban development.

Liem of the Urban Research and Infrastructure Development Institute said that the development of land reserves would also help collect most benefits from land for the State budget.

Under the master plan on urban development between now and 2025 with a vision to 2050 that was approved by the Prime Minister last year, there should have some 910 urban towns and cities in the country by 2020. The population in cities should reach 44 million, or 45% of the country’s population by then.

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Sunday, September 19, 2010

Capital needs to modernise

A view of the Indochina Plaza construction site in Ha Noi. The Politburo said that Ha Noi needed to pay attention to urban planning and management and complete its general development goals following its expansion. — VNA/VNS Photo Duong Giang

A view of the Indochina Plaza construction site in Ha Noi. The Politburo said that Ha Noi needed to pay attention to urban planning and management and complete its general development goals following its expansion. — VNA/VNS Photo Duong Giang

HA NOI — Party General Secretary Nong Duc Manh yesterday asked Ha Noi to maintain its position as the pioneer in modernisation and industrialisation by improving the economy's competitiveness and urban construction and planning.

Manh and other members of the Politburo were attending a meeting with Ha Noi's municipal Party Standing Committee to discuss draft documents and personnel planning for the city's Party Congress for the 2010-15 period.

According to reports from the committee, during the last five years, the city had maintained a rather high economic growth rate with average income per capita reaching US$2,000 per year.

The political situation, social order and security remained stable while the development of the Party organisation and political system had been properly implemented.

Twenty-five years after the renewal process began, Ha Noi remained the national centre for politics and administration, culture, education, economics and international trade.

However, the Politburo noted that the city still had some weaknesses. The economy had not developed in line with its potential, and the knowledge-based economy lagged behind development demands.

Urban construction, planning and management had been weak, and links between urban and rural infrastructure remained loose. Management of land, construction, flooding, environmental pollution and traffic congestion was still ineffective.

The city had not tapped its intellectual potential and the rich-poor gap between rural and urban areas remained large. Political leadership in many grassroots levels of the Party was poorly effective.

In order to hit the targets of the next five-year plan, the Politburo said Ha Noi needed to strengthen growth and economic restructuring and carefully consider the relationship between the capital's expansion and the heightening of its competitiveness and economic efficiency.

The city must focus on developing high-quality sectors or hi-tech greener, less labour-intensive industries.

City leaders also needed to pay attention to urban planning and management and complete the city's general planning following its expansion.

When addressing issues related to land management, construction, traffic, environmental pollution, the development of a sophisticated, urbane lifestyle for people also needed to be taken into account.

The Politburo also said the city should mobilise all resources available to develop education, training, healthcare and science and technology.

The application of a new rural model needed to be enhanced to heighten the living standards of the city's residents and narrow the gap between urban and rural areas.

In addition, the city needed to build a strong, well-qualified, talented and transparent Party Committee.

In terms of the personel plan for the city's Party Committee congress, the Politburo said the city should attempt to engage younger deputies and improve the management of staff prior to and following the congress. — VNS

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