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Withstanding the forces: A Study of the Spatial Configuration

as the Factor of Organizing Activities in Small Cities


Aruna Bandara, Lakshika Meetiyagoda & Jagath Munasinghe,
Department of Town & Country Planning,
University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka

toaruna@uom.lk, meetitlm@yahoo.com, jagathnm@sltnet.lk,

____________________________________________________________________________
Abstract
Small cities in Asia will have to play a major role in future urban scenario, as a considerable share of the
world urban population by the mid of this century will be living in them. Planning their growth thus, has
become a need of the day, and to support their planning with better informed decisions research is
urgently needed in many aspects of small cities. One such important aspect is the dynamics of the
configuration of spaces, which the existing body of knowledge in planning has yet not fully explained
and, towards which the planning approaches are conventionally least sensitive. In that context, this paper
explores the dynamics of the spatial order in two small cities in Sri Lanka, namely Galle and Rathnapura.
The two cities have been experiencing two types of forces associated with their growth and change. The
first is the set of endogenous forces that urges them to change, sometimes expanding outward from their
boundaries. The second is the flux of exogenous forces, among which technocratic urban planning
process and recurrent and unexpected natural disasters are the prominent. Rathnapura city experienced
annual floods, and a planned intervention to overcome that, and Galle city experienced a sudden tsunami
disaster and an unplanned project based intervention that affected its growth. The interventions resulted in
a reconfigurations and changes in the spatial order of activities in both cities, but in manners that were
unprecedented by the planning agencies. The paper discusses this phenomenon of self-organizing,
responding to the effects of external forces of change, as a function of the spatial configuration: that is
the overall composition of spatial elements, to determine the activity pattern: that is the order of the
location of activities in space. The spatial configurations and the activity patterns of these two cities
before and after the said interventions are compared. The pattern of the activity spaces are studied with
activity mapping and the spatial configurations are studied using Space Syntax.

Key Words: Small Cities, Forces of Change, Activity Pattern, Configuration

10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

1.0

Introduction

Asia will be playing the main role in all global affairs in the rest of this century and beyond, for which
Asian cities has already been placed at the centre of upcoming trends in urban research. Yet, research on
Asia has largely focused upon the few mega cities, in spite of the estimated two thirds of Asias urban
population that will be found in urban enclaves other than the few mega cities by the mid of this century.
Small cities, whose populations are reaching the line of 100,000 (as per the UN Classification) will be the
pivotal in future urban structure in Asia, and therefore, deserve attention in research agendas on the urban
future of Asia. Prompt attention on small cities is important due to the problematic trends of their present
growth and the less responsive planning interventions commonly seen in almost all of them. Limited land
resources, constrained by sensitive natural settings, conservable built heritage integrated into their
physical environment and the under developed infrastructure networks, which sometimes have been over
exploited, are all problematic for a smooth sustainable development of these cities. Further, it is
frequently complained that despite long inherited settlement planning traditions and decades old modern
urban planning and urban development administration systems dealt with these cities, their growth
patterns often contended what was envisaged by the plans. Hence, their developments can be guided only
through better informed, well thought and carefully drawn strategic interventions. For this purpose, a
better understanding of the spatial dynamics of small cities is essential for planners.
In that background, this paper presents a study that explored the dynamics of the formation and the
sustenance of spatial order of activities in two small cities of Sri Lanka; namely Galle and Rathnapura.
The paper discusses how both the cities have been self-organized responding to the effects of different
external forces of change, reflecting the capacity of the spatial configuration: that is the overall
composition of spatial elements, to determine the activity pattern: that is the order of organization of the
activities in space. The main objective of the paper is to bring into light the capacity of the configuration
to withstand forced change, a fact that urban planning approaches had conventionally less considered,
especially when they deal with small cities. The two cases selected for this study in some way urge
planners to reconsider some aspects of conventional planning, although not to totally do away with them,
in order to effectively address the issues related to the growth, functioning and withstanding natural
disasters. The levels of the hierarchy are identified with some prominent activities located in them.
The small cities in Sri Lanka, similar to those of any other country, have unique patterns characterized by
a hierarchy of primary, secondary and tertiary urban activity spaces, experienced by their inhabitants and
got organized over the years of their growth. These spaces are usually identified with the caliber, intensity
and the bustle of the activities associated with them. Spaces at each pattern of activities not only facilitate
the functioning of the city and its economy, but also sustain the socio-cultural events and the identity of
the place. The pattern is not necessarily static, but susceptible to change due to the effects of both
endogenous and exogenous forces. The endogenous forces surge from within the socio-economic and
political affairs of the cities and they push the cities to change, reconfiguring urban spaces within and
beyond their boundaries, converting the uses and transforming the apparent characters, introducing new
elements and eliminating the existing ones. The exogenous forces are imposed upon the city from outside
regional, national and global affairs effectuated by nature, society, economy and the polity. Emerging
trends in the world economy and its resulting effects in Sri Lankan economy make a tremendous impact
towards the changing the activity patterns of these cities. Recurrent and unexpected natural disasters such
as flood, landslides, tsunami, etc, affect most of these cities. Above all the technocratic urban planning
directly intervenes in them with the intension of regulating their activity patterns.
The cases of two small cities presented in this paper show two different manners in their growth, with two
different types of planning interventions, but experiencing somewhat similar effects of disaster. Galle city
has been changing its activity pattern in an order that was unexpected by the urban plans prepared for it,
10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

but favouring the adaptation to harsh experience of a natural disaster. Rathnapura city has been
maintaining a somewhat consistent pattern of activities despite the planned intervention expecting a
change to overcome the effects of a recurrent natural disaster. The paper explains the change in Galle, and
the sustenance in Rathnapura, in the order of their activities as a function of the overall configurations of
their space units: the streets and the other spaces of public movement. For this purpose, the order of the
distribution of activities and the configuration of spatial units in each city are comparatively studies at two
different stages of their growth: 1982 and 2007. The changes in activity patterns are studied through
activity mapping at two instances and the changing configuration of spatial elements are analyzed with
Space Syntax, which is an emerging space analysis technique.
2.0

Studies on the urban space, its organization and change

The urban space, its organization and its change has been a subject of interest for many research for over
many decades by now. Out of the voluminous body of literature, studies that dealt with the urban space as
a phenomenon in change can be divided into a few categories. The first category of literature viewed the
changing urban space relating to the figures and the events of history, presented by the forces of culture
and politics. For example Morris (1979), Mumford (1964), Kostof (1990), and Rossi(1984) even with
different arguments discussed the change and the evolution primarily as a historic process of shaping the
physical environment to accommodate the decisions of both the rulers and the ruled.
In the second category, Burgesss (1925) mapping of Concentric Zones of Chicago, Homer Hoyts (1939)
observations on sector growth phenomenon of US cities and Harris and Ulmanns (1945) model of
Multiple Nuclei cities, took a socio-spatial approach towards the urban space. These studies presupposed
an inevitable expansion of activities akin to the forces of urban growth. Thus, they explained the change
and the evolution of urban areas primarily as a continuous transformation of spaces, based either on the
growing demand for space by competing urban activities and the resident location preferences of different
social groups, or contesting perceptions of different inhabitant groups and their reflections on space. The
third group studied the evolutionary process of urban areas, mainly cities, as a responsive dialect between
the economic forces and the social organizations. Literature of this category takes the view that the
growth of contemporary cities is a process characterized by the inevitable invasion of traditional quarters
and agricultural suburbs by modern urban functions. (eg: Friedman, 1966).
Studies, inspired by Lefebvre (1984) and the later, focused upon the contested and negotiated,
propositional and oppositional interests on space between the colonial and the colonized, rulers and the
ruled, and the foreigners and natives (eg: Yeoh, 2003, Perera, 2002, Hosagrahar,1999). These works have
contributed some insights and understandings on the multiple authorship and parallel processes of making
and remaking urban spaces.
The Space Syntax research stream, initiated after Hanson & Hilliers (1986) work on social logic and
movement economy of space, and furthered with the subsequent work of Hillier (1996, 1999), Read
(1999), Penn (1998) and many others, centred self-organized space as the responsive force of the city.
Space syntax is gaining popularity in the area of planning and urban design, mainly due to the urban
space modeling possibilities demonstrated by the method associated with it. In his early work
Hillier(1996) used space syntax method to analyze urban spaces of London and showed that the spatial
configuration of a city results in different levels of spatial integration to urban spaces and the most
integrated spaces attracted the most competitive urban activities, pedestrians and the life of the city.
Spatial Configuration is the order, in which the streets and other public access ways are organized,
enabling the movements between different spatial units within the city. Spatial Integration of a space is
the interactive relationship that spatial unit maintains with all other units of the city in terms of
connectivity. The competition therefore, is between different segments of the city, and their unequal
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10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

levels of spatial integration lead some urban spaces to overthrow the others being highly attractive. As the
city grows, the new elements introduced change the overall spatial configuration of the city, changing the
spatial integration of all individual spatial units. Thus, their attraction fluctuates leading to a change of
activity locations in the city.
In a subsequent work Hillier (1999) studied the formulation of central spaces, in which all employment
and higher order economic activities are concentrated, as a continuous process in cities. The displacement
of centrality of spaces along with the main activities from the historic quarters towards once an edge, as
the city expands or contracts is explained as a function of changing spatial configuration. Da Costa
Bagra (2007) supported the main idea by showing the continuation of the centrality of historic quarters of
Rio de Janeiro for three centuries as a result of the consistent spatial configuration.
These works suggest that urban areas are in a process of change throughout, and the change in the order
of their activities, reorganization pattern and the growth can be better understood and guided by planners
by observing the power of the internal force: the Spatial Configuration. But conventional planning
approaches usually understand urban spaces as neutral, static end states that can be realized through
deterministic manipulations. Hence, they rarely account for the dynamic relationship between the
organization of space and the location order of activities, and the spatial strategies proposed by plans
often bear no value in the process.
3.0

The method of Study: Examination of organization and configuration

The method of the study consisted of three main steps. In the first step, the changing order of activity
spaces in the two cities over a period of twenty five years (from 1982-2007) are observed. This is done by
analyzing the changes observable in the organization of prominent urban activities within the areas under
consideration. For this purpose, the urban activities found in the two cities are classified into five groups,
based upon their generally implied competitiveness in urban locations (table 1). For example, commercial
banks, insurance companies, trade organizations and the similar, which are highly competitive in bidding
for urban spaces, are considered as the higher order activities, while the less competitive local businesses
such as the small general grocery shops, tea boutiques and small fruit and vegetable stalls are in
considered as the low-order activities. These activities are organized within urban areas into some pattern,
for which one can easily read a hierarchical arrangement in spaces. The spaces, in which the higher order
trade activities are prominent, are regarded as at the top of the hierarchy. Similarly the areas with only
local sales activities are placed at the lowest in the hierarchy. In this study, these hierarchical orders in
both the cities in 1982 and 2007 are compared to observe the changes.
In the second step the configurations of the streets and public movement paths of the cities in 1982 and
2007 are analyzed for a comparison. Syntactic analysis of the Space Syntax method is used for this
purpose. The fundamental unit of consideration of Space Syntax method is the axial connectivity that
makes the shortest possible path from one end to another end of the public space (street, square, alley,
etc). Thus, the first step in Space Syntax analysis is to reduce the composition of streets, alleys and all
other public spaces in an urban area into a composition of axial lines that incident either on one another or
many others. The number of minimum axial line connections (shortest possible path) that a person has to
pass through to get into a space from another space decides the level of connectivity of the first in relation
to the second. In this manner, the connectivity of a space into all other spaces in the urban area can be
evaluated by accounting for overall spatial configuration of the area. The level of connectivity is an
indication of the degree to which each space is integrated into the urban area. In order to apply the method
the streets and other public movement paths of the two cities are reduced to axial-line diagrams, and
these diagrams intern, are analyzed using depth map, which is the commonly used software for Space
Syntax studies. It analyses the level of integration of each axial line (which represent a street segment) at
10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

a given radius of consideration. In this study, the analysis is done at global level, which considered the
connectivity between all possible axial lines of the diagram.
Category

Activities (Categorized based on the level of the competitiveness for the space)

Commercial High

Super Markets, Banks, Other financial agencies, Street vending, Jewelry, etc

Commercial Medium

Groceries, Pharmacies, Hotels (tea boutiques), etc

Commercial Low

Storages, Hardware, Vehicle spare parts, Vehicle repairing, etc

Residential

Individual dwellings (with gardens), Collective dwellings, etc

Agriculture

All types of agricultural activities

Table 01: Categorization of the urban activities

The method emphasizes two levels of integration of an urban space: local and global (Hillier, 1996).
Local integration is indicative of the structural composition of the public spaces at the locality level and
its analysis enables to identify the locations that are most and least attractive within the immediate
context. Hence, when an urban area is analyzed at the local level, the local centres emerge as the most
integrated spaces and more competitive land uses are usually concentrated into them. Global integration is
the indicator of the attractiveness of different public spaces at the overall spatial configuration of the city.
Only the global integration is taken into account in this study, as it deals with a change that has happened
at the city scale.
Last step was to visually correlate the changes observed in the prominent activity patterns with the
changes observed in the spatial configurations. The presented discussion of the paper is derived from the
findings of this correlative analysis. In the discussion part, an effort is made to understand the causative
factors behind the type of findings of the study.

4.0

The study areas:

4.1

Galle

The city of Galle has a long history (1400 BC) as an international trade center, but its presence was
globally highlighted after the arrival of the Portuguese in 1505. For Portuguese, Galle had been the
trading and administrative hub for the areas they captured in Sri Lanka. The advantage of the natural
setting of the Galle habour and its locational advantage caused to the Dutch invasion in 1650s. In 1660s,
Dutch built the presently apparent fortress in Galle, which is declared as a world heritage site by
UNESCO, demolishing the Portuguese structures. British who acquired the coastal areas in Sri Lanka in
1796 made Galle the local administrative centre for the southern area of the island. Since then, Galle has
been the main administrative centre of the Southern province of Sri Lanka. For a long period all major
administrative activities of the city was concentrated within the fortress, while the trade and commerce
were finding their places in the vicinity at the outside areas of the fortress. In 1970s some of the
government institutions got located out of the fortress, at a close proximity to the main Colombo-Matara
highway that runs across the city by the highly attractive sea front. The city was virtually developing
along the main highway with a concentration towards the centre where main bus stand and the rail station
are located (figure 1). In early 1980s, the Government of Sri Lanka established a new hospital complex,
along with a medical faculty of the Ruhuna Univeristy at Karapitiya, located 6 kilometers interior from
the city. The location was largely politically decided, but supported by the factors such as the availability
of vast extents of developable land at relatively lower prices. With the establishment of the hospital and
the medical faculty, a vast infrastructure development has taken place in this area. Along with that a new
Engineering faculty and a technical college too were established in 1990s. With this new development
Karapitiya has been an attraction to a larger residential population and needy urban activities. Most of the
agricultural and plantation lands were subdivided and got transformed into residential uses. Amidst them,
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10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

large commercial complexes as well as small retail outlets, banks, private educational and other
institutions have also got located. More employment and business opportunities were available and more
transportation facilities are demanded linking the original urban area of Galle and Karapitiya (figure 2).

OLD TOWN
Bus Terminal, Railway
Station and Major
Commercial activities

FORT
Administrative activities
1
Kilometers

Figure 01: Locations of the key urban activities in Galle before 1980s

Faculty of EngineeringUniversity of Ruhuna


THANI POLGAHA JUNCTION
Emerging Major Commercial
activities

OLD TOWN
Bus Terminal, Railway
Station and Major
Commercial activities

KARAPITIYA JUNCTION
Faculty of Medicine University of Ruhuna and
Karapitiya Teaching
Hospital
activities

FORT
Administrative activities
1
Kilometers

Figure 02: Locations of the key urban activities and new development in Galle after 1980s
10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

However, the planning agencies did not have deliberate intension to direct the city away from its original
settings, as it is evident with the draft urban development plan of 1980s prepared by the UDA. But after
2004 Tsunami, which had severely hit the whole city, devalued the attraction of the original business and
residential locations of the coastal area and as a result, an accelerated movement of these activities
towards inland can be noted. Unlike the typical urban expansion, which is starting from the center and
spread along the main arteries in a descending pattern, the shifting in Galle happens with a few newly
emerging centers. Some of the activities at the old Galle city remains, while the new businesses and the
residences shows a preference to be located away from that and concentrated around the new centres,
including Karapitiya. It can be noted that except for the strength of the bus and rail terminal those have
been longstanding at the city centre to hold back, most of the trade, commercial, institutional and
residential activities would have found their way out of the old city into interiors by now.

4.2

Ratnapura

The name; Rathnapura implies the City of Gems and the whole region of Rathnapura is known for
gem mining. Rathnapura has been the administrative centre of Sabaragomuwa Province of Sri Lanka from
1850s, from the times of British colonial ruling of the island. The city has grown outward from a nuclei
formed at the intersection of a few major highways of the country. Thus, it has a concentric form and
elongated along main highways (figure 3). Located at the bank of Kalu Ganga River, which carries the
runoff from the highest precipitated areas of the island, and situated at a very low elevation the city is also
known also for its experience of major floods almost every year. In certain years extensive property and
human loses are reported due to floods and the entire routine functions of the city are held for a few days
during flood occasions.

OLD TOWN
Bus Terminal, Railway
Station, Administrative and
Major Commercial activities

1
Kilometers

Figure 03: Locations of the key urban activities in Rathnapura before 1980s

Having considered the severity of the damages caused by the floods, the government of Sri Lanka decided
to relocate the major functions at a higher elevation close to the original location of the city. Accordingly
the Rathnapura New Town was built in early 1980s . The new town is built approximately 2 kilometers
away from the old town. The New Town was provided with all needy infrastructure and most of the
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10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

government institutions were shifted therein. New housing schemes were developed to attract people and
a gradual movement of commercial and other urban activities was expected. To a contrary, the city has
not shifted in the expected direction and instead it has been growing at a considerable rate centering the
old town. The new town does not have the life of a city as most of the lands are vacant still and becomes
dead, after working hours of the government offices (figure 4). At present, all city activities, except a few
administration institutions, are located in the old town, even amidst flood situations. A few major
highways that connect Rathnapura to other regions, public amenities such as the bus terminals, play
grounds, etc, and some of the high level trade and commercial facilities are inundated and inaccessible
during the periods of heavy rains, yet comfortably settled in the old town centre.

[
NEW TOWN
Administrative Activities

OLD TOWN
Bus Terminal, Railway
Station and Major
Commercial activities
1
Kilometers

Figure 04: Locations of the key urban activities in Rathnapura after 1980s

5.0

The Analysis and the Observations: The spatial order and the spatial configuration

In the first step of the study the locations of the five types of urban activities in the two cities in both 1982
and in 2007 were recorded in maps. According to the classification discussed earlier, the hierarchy of
spaces, based on the observations on prominent activity types, in the cities could be noted as in the
manner given in figures 5 and 6. The figures of Galle show a significant change in the location of activity
spaces between two years. A few new activity spaces have emerged by 2007 away from the spaces seen
in 1982 situation. This is an indication of a shift of the spatial order of the city. The figures of Rathnapura,
except for a few additions to the 1982 layout, show only a minor change in the order of activity spaces.
Especially, the higher order spaces remain the same and more activities of the type have got accumulated
in them. The new elements added to the city after 1982 do not seem to have changed the activity pattern
in a significant manner.

10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

In the second step the spatial configuration of the two cities at the two different situations are analyzed
with space syntax method. The results of the analysis are given in figures 7 and 8. The figures of Galle
show a clear change in the configuration as well as a very clear change in the levels of spatial integration
of different street segments. In 1982 situation, the most integrated spaces are noted in the old city centre
along the main highway, and the integration values are gradually decreasing towards the peripheries of
the city. In 2007 configuration the higher values of integration are noted at several segments. This leads to
the understanding that the new developments in the peripheral areas of the city within this period has
changed the overall spatial configuration of the whole area and thereby, adjusted the degree of spatial
integration of different street segments. The results of Rathnapura analysis show somewhat opposite
situation. The levels of spatial integration of most of the spaces have not changed significantly, although
the overall spatial configuration of the city was extended with the new components of the new town
development. Instead of changing locations, the street segments at the old city centre have achieved
increased levels of spatial integration as shown in the diagram. In other words, the new town
developments had a less impact on the overall spatial configuration of the Rathnapura city.
When these two sets of observations: that is the changes in the activity pattern and the changes in overall
spatial configuration: are compared, it is possible to note some parallel changes between the two cities. In
both instances examined in two cities, the street segments with the highest degree of integration are the
spaces that accommodated the higher order urban activities. In 1982, the location closer to the fortress at
the Colombo-Matara highway was the location for higher order urban activities in Galle and it at the same
time was the most integrated segment of the overall spatial configuration of the city. By 2007, Thani
Polgaha Junction at the interior of old quarter of Galle, near Katapitiya and a few other locations around
it, attracted higher order urban activities while these same locations have shown an increased level of
spatial integration. In Rathnapura, the main street and its surroundings has throughout been the location
for higher order urban activities and it is the segment that is mostly integrated in overall spatial
configuration, in both years. This indicates a high probability for the spatial configuration of a city to
have the capacity to change the pattern of its activity spaces, in line with the findings of previous Space
Syntax studies (eg: London, Santiago (Hillier,1996))

10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

1982

Commercial - High
Commercial - Medium
Commercial - Low
Residential
1

Agriculture

Kilometers

2007

Commercial - High
Commercial - Medium
Commercial - Low
Residential
Agriculture

1
Kilometers

Figure 05: Distribution of activity types in Galle in 1982 and 2007 (prominent activities)

10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

10

1982

Commercial - High
Commercial - Medium
Commercial - Low
Residential
1

Agriculture

Kilometers

2007

Commercial - High
Commercial - Medium
Commercial - Low
Residential
Agriculture

1
Kilometers

Figure 06: Distribution of activity types in Rathnapura in 1982 and 2007 (prominent activities)

10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

11

1982

Integration (Global)
0.152 - 0.161

0.247 - 0.256

0.342 - 0.350

0.162 - 0.171

0.257 - 0.265

0.351 - 0.360

0.172 - 0.180

0.266 - 0.275

0.361 - 0.369

0.181 - 0.190

0.276 - 0.284

0.370 - 0.379

0.191 - 0.199

0.285 - 0.294

0.380 - 0.388

0.200 - 0.209

0.295 - 0.303

0.389 - 0.398

0.210 - 0.218

0.304 - 0.313

0.399 - 0.407

0.219 - 0.228

0.314 - 0.322

0.408 - 0.416

0.229 - 0.237

0.323 - 0.331

0.417 - 0.426

0.238 - 0.246

0.332 - 0.341

0.427 - 0.435

1
Kilometers

2007

Integration (Global)
0.119 - 0.151

0.273 - 0.279

0.335 - 0.342

0.152 - 0.176

0.280 - 0.284

0.343 - 0.350

0.177 - 0.194

0.285 - 0.291

0.351 - 0.359

0.195 - 0.208

0.292 - 0.297

0.360 - 0.369

0.209 - 0.221

0.298 - 0.303

0.370 - 0.379

0.222 - 0.233

0.304 - 0.309

0.380 - 0.389

0.234 - 0.245

0.310 - 0.315

0.390 - 0.403

0.246 - 0.256

0.316 - 0.321

0.404 - 0.421

0.257 - 0.265

0.322 - 0.328

0.422 - 0.445

0.266 - 0.272

0.329 - 0.334

0.446 - 0.490

1
Kilometers

Figure 07: Spatial Integrations of Galle in 1982 and 2007 (Global)

10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

12

1982

[
Integration (Global)
0.044 - 0.051

0.142 - 0.147

0.052 - 0.057

0.148 - 0.154

0.058 - 0.064

0.155 - 0.160

0.065 - 0.070

0.161 - 0.167

0.071 - 0.076

0.168 - 0.173

0.077 - 0.083

0.174 - 0.180

0.084 - 0.089

0.181 - 0.186

0.090 - 0.096

0.187 - 0.193

0.097 - 0.102

0.194 - 0.199

0.103 - 0.109

0.200 - 0.205

0.110 - 0.115

0.206 - 0.212

0.116 - 0.122

0.213 - 0.218

0.123 - 0.128

0.219 - 0.225

0.129 - 0.134

0.226 - 0.231

0.135 - 0.141

0.232 - 0.238

1
Kilometers

2007

[
Integration (Global)
0.039 - 0.046

0.114 - 0.116

0.047 - 0.053

0.117 - 0.120

0.054 - 0.060

0.121 - 0.123

0.061 - 0.067

0.124 - 0.126

0.068 - 0.073

0.127 - 0.129

0.074 - 0.078

0.130 - 0.133

0.079 - 0.083

0.134 - 0.136

0.084 - 0.087

0.137 - 0.139

0.088 - 0.091

0.140 - 0.143

0.092 - 0.095

0.144 - 0.147

0.096 - 0.099

0.148 - 0.151

0.100 - 0.102

0.152 - 0.156

0.103 - 0.106

0.157 - 0.162

0.107 - 0.110

0.163 - 0.169

0.111 - 0.113

0.170 - 0.179

1
Kilometers

Figure 08: Spatial Integrations of Rathnapura in 1982 and 2007 (Global)

10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

13

6.0

Discussion: The planned and the self-organized change

The findings of the above analysis raise a few points to consider, especially in the context of planning and
urban development. As it was discussed earlier, the major changes in Rathnapura city within the studied
period of twenty five years were planned developments. The new town was the main extension to the city
and it was built with the intention of encouraging major activities of the city to move into the new high
grounds from their present flood prone locations in the old town. Yet, the expected shift has been very
marginal and the old town area was still thriving as the centre and the most demanded area of the city.
The situation is rather problematic for two reasons. First, the planning effort and the investment on road
and other infrastructure in the new town project are questionable as they could not accomplish the
intended purpose of the project. The new town is rather under-utilized and perhaps become an additional
burden on municipal council as it got to maintain an area that still does not have a substantial population
and activities. Second, the original problem of flood and related hazards continue with the losses
recurrently recorded almost every year.
On the other hand, the prevalent trends of growth in Galle are not planned situations. The establishment
of the new hospital, university colleges, and other institutions away from the main city areas were largely
isolated decisions, without a known consideration of the subsequent developments. Rather than on
development planning grounds the project locations were decided more upon political grounds. From the
times of their establishment, the city gradually began to grow in that direction, even without, and
somewhat contradicting the development plan prepared for Galle city. However, this unprecedented
pattern of growth had been realized to be a blessing after the main city area was badly hit by a tsunami in
December 2004. The amended development plans in the post-tsunami era adopted the trend positively and
the future development will be admittedly directed in that way.
Both cases studied above show us that the cities have grown not necessarily in the direction that the plans
had expected them to grow. Rather than conforming to the framework set by the plans, they had more
propensities to take their own turns and forms at the instances of intervention. Responding to the
interventions, they got self-organized to have their own configurations. The case of Galle shows how the
city has actively responded to unplanned isolated projects by reconfiguring its spaces and reorganizing the
activities in a considerable manner. The case of Rathnapura shows how the citys meager response to a
planned intervention by organizing spaces and activities on its own to keep the newly added spaces bit
away from its existed order. This leaves the question whether the planning of these two cities was based
on adequate consideration of the spatial dynamics and their ground realities.
In a democratic society and free market oriented economy within which the planning operates in Sri
Lanka and many other countries, people have the right to have a choice of residential location, shopping
and movement. The investors enjoy high freedom to exercise their choice of business location. The
businesses are allowed to thrive with fewer constraints for mobility. In that context, it is obvious that all
of them find the best locations of their preference. In an open competition as it is available in our urban
areas, the most competitive activities gets the most advantageous locations, which are the most accessible
points. The most accessible spaces are marked by higher degrees of integration in the overall
configuration as examined in this study. Thus, the locations offered by the plans may not necessarily be
the preferred choices of the urban activities, if they do not have the required degree of integration. The
question then is whether the cities can be planned to have the preferred levels of integration in spaces in
their overall configuration. Mega cities are usually complex, and their configuration can be well beyond
the planners comprehension, to cope up in a singularized planning attempt. The smaller cities are not less
complex, but the planners can deal with their configuration in a more versatile manner, if the spatial
dynamics of the organization are well understood. The conclusion we can derive at the end of this paper is
that the overall configuration of spatial elements: that is streets and public pathways, in a city is decisive
10th International Congress of Asian Planning Schools Association FUTURE OF ASIAN CITIES
24 -26 November, 2009, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India

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on the spatial order of the location of different types of urban activities in it. This implies that, if the
potential self-driven reconfiguration possibilities of a city with different planning interventions are
studied in depth, there is a high probability for the planners to envisage an achievable spatial order and to
achieve what is envisaged by the plan, in a small city like the ones studied here. The most strategic
interventions with the higher probability to lead the city to reconfigure in the direction of the intended
spatial order of activities, be it shifting of existing ones, inducing a new order, or otherwise, can be
regarded as what the planner must consider, deviating from the conventional deterministic approaches.
For that purpose, modeling of alternatives using methods such as space syntax will be highly useful.
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