In this age of rapid
urbanization and growing populations cities in the developing world are
expanding at an unprecedented rate. In many of these cities, green space has
often been overwhelmed by growth, migration from the countryside and a lack of
planning. Encroachment, both legal and illegal, has gradually swallowed up
forests and grassland, diminishing green space. Overwhelmed by financial
demands, municipalities have neglected the problem, assuming that green space
was unproductive and therefore of little value -- or worse, a financial
liability.
It is in this context that
the Historic Cities Programme (HCP) understood that rather than being financial
liabilities, green spaces themselves could be catalysts for positive economic, social
and cultural change. With 10 park and garden projects HCP has demonstrated that
parks not only contribute to the quality of life in cities, but that they can
be self-sustaining and can also be economic generators that drive – directly
and indirectly – a broad advance of positive change in terms of social
development, local employment, entrepreneurial activity and cultural development.