REIMAGINING A SQUATTER SETTLEMENT
By Students of the NED University’s Department of Architecture and Planning
Mohammadi Colony is a squatter settlement that is situated in close proximity to the port in Karachi. The colony is commonly known as Machhar Colony, not because of mosquitoes (although they do exist) but due to the heavy presence of fisherfolk — mostly of Bengali ethnicity — who are heavily involved in the fishing, shrimp-peeling, boat-making, and fishing net-making industry. But for years, authorities in Karachi have abandoned it on the pretext that it is an ‘illegal’ settlement.
Mohammadi Colony has thrived due to the absence of affordable housing for the poor elsewhere. Despite a failure of governance in providing housing or amenities, it is an ever-expanding locality with great demand for residential quarters. The rising population pressure, in turn, puts greater pressure on limited resources as well as the adjoining mangrove plantations which are felled as per residents’ or builders’ needs.
It also presents the classic problems of a slum in the urban jungle — lack of hygiene, proliferation of disease, lack of public spaces and amenities and scant attention to aesthetics.
But young blood tends to bring new ideas and idealism to antiquated problems and outdated conceptions. Enter the students of NED University’s Department of Architecture and Planning.
Eos presents here some elements of a project by them that re-imagines one of the oldest squatter settlements in Karachi. In many ways, it provides design solutions to what the government has been unable to solve. These interventions have been formulated after months of sociological research and architectural and planning feasibilities.
In this project, Mohammadi Colony has been reimagined using the four principles of urban planning outlined by renowned town planner Arif Hasan. These principles are:
1. Planning should respect the ecology of the areas in which the urban centres are located
2. Land use should be determined on the basis of social and environmental considerations and not on the basis of land value or potential land value alone
3. Planning should give priority to the needs of the majority population which, in the case of Asia, are low and lower-middle income communities, hawkers, informal businesses, pedestrians and commuters
4. Planning must respect and promote the tangible and intangible cultural heritage of the communities that live in the city
The ideas presented here will hopefully be instructive for city administrations, not only for any future upgrading of Mohammadi Colony but also for other squatter settlements in the rest of the country.
LOCAL ECONOMY IN SYNC WITH THE ENVIRONMENT
The central hub of economic activity is actually two nullahs called the Moosa Lane Nullah and the Ahmed Shah Bukhari Road Nullah. The former runs along the main road while the latter, perpendicular to the Moosa Lane Nullah, runs across the breadth of the colony.
These nullahs actually serve to bring together the various ethnic groups residing in and around the colony. But usually, they are filled with debris and garbage. Economic activity around them includes roadside hawkers, tea shacks and the like. The encroachment of land in Machchar Colony has amplified over time, to the extent that the space around the nullahs and their catchment areas have also been covered with houses of various sizes. The natural flow of the nullahs have become a danger site where black water flows without being treated, resulting in various diseases. Heaps of garbage exist on vacant plots.