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dc.contributor.authorNakawooya, Resty
dc.date.accessioned2019-11-13T09:05:32Z
dc.date.available2019-11-13T09:05:32Z
dc.date.issued2019-01
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12281/7128
dc.descriptionA dissertation submitted to the Department of Architecture and Physical Planning in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award of the Degree of Bachelor of Urban and Regional Planning of Makerere University.en_US
dc.description.abstractA new wave of commercialization is sweeping across Kampala City residential areas where many residential zones are turning into commercial hubs, a trend physical planners say is meant to create more opportunities for Kampala landlords. Some of the areas that were zoned into residential zones have been converted into business places for bars, guest houses, restaurants and offices. Some of these include high end suburbs of Nakasero, Bukoto, Kololo, Naguru, Acacia and Lumumba avenues. In these places, businesses have since boomed, bringing in a new transition. During the colonial times and shortly after independence, housing planning in the city was carefully carried out to cater for the different categories of people according to their incomes. In Kampala, top civil servants lived in places such as Kololo and Naguru; lower level civil servants lived in flats, also in places such as Kololo, while factory workers lived in estates in Naguru, Nakawa and Luzira. Although these places were considered to be residential areas for first class citizens, they are slowly turning into commercial hubs, offering many opportunities for Kampala residents. This trend is being caused by the expansion of the central business district. The new urbanization encourages mixed use of land in the city where human activities can co-exist with human settlement. However, there must be regulation to control the sprouting businesses to ensure they are in tandem with the physical setting of such areas. Kampala has been expanding but we have not embraced vertical development in terms of mixed activities. For instance, in Hong Kong City, which has a high population density, the policy is 301 persons per hectare but in Uganda, it’s only 45 persons per hectare. This isn’t good for us because land is being misused where some people are on rampage of setting up bungalows without considering other activities that they can establish on the same land. Although the old plan had zoned the city into residential areas, industrial areas, civic areas, administrative, institutions and commercial, the trend has since changed as a result of pressure from growing population. Since the city is now congested in terms of traffic jam, people find it convenient to establish businesses such as restaurants, bars and offices in residential places to avoid the inconveniences downtown. Mixed urban development reduces the demand for travel because very many people have now resorted to working from where they stay and there is optimal use of land for both commercial and residential to improve on land management. This explains why you see that people are staying in Kololo but have since established businesses there. For those who establish offices in these areas, they want a relaxed environment which is free from the trouble caused by city congestion.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectUrban land use invasionen_US
dc.subjectUrban land use successionen_US
dc.titleAnalysis of urban land use invasion and succession trends in Kampala city : A case study of Kololo Hill (1962-2018)en_US
dc.typeThesisen_US


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