Skip to main content

We Don't Talk about Livability Enough

We don't.

What's the number one thing you wished would change in the place you live in?

I'm not talking about a trip to IKEA for your personal living space. It's something bigger.

Beyond your drive way, your porch.

Your immediate surroundings or even the township that you're in.

When was the last time we paused and reflected on the state its in?

Are there clogged drains, litter, stray animals, broken lights, mosquito infestation, rats, roaches, cracked sidewalks, potholes, unused empty spaces, overgrowth, weeds? Just to name a few.

Maybe you think it'll be nice to finally add more park benches for people to sit in. Or maybe, to have a park to start with.

"Livability" as a concept is not widely discussed on its on, but implied: whether the place has a high quality of living, infrastructure, public transportation, education, amenities, suitable climate, access to jobs. All of these decide whether a place is "livable" or not.

But these factors usually only enter our conversations when we decide to move, relocate, migrate or rent/purchase property.

After that decision is made, we rarely talk about these things anymore, other than the occasional grunt or complaint made in passing, then we get on with our lives.

We dismiss it, because there's nothing you can do about it. Or, at least, that's how you feel.

Maybe you write a letter in protestation or to voice your grievance to your local neighbourhood council.

But halfway through that letter, you know in the back of your mind, that it'll fall on deaf ears.

The battle is half lost.

You don't trust the process, because there isn't one.

So, we settle - settle for the lack of maintenance, settle of the lack of importance placed on making your space more comfortable, settle for incompetence, settle for the blame-game.

How do we solve this and bring livability back into our conversations?

We have to take ownership of the spaces we inhabit and fight.

Fight for our right for more livability.

When a community starts taking ownership of the place they co-inhabit, you'll start to see the conversation shift towards a more concrete and sustainable definition "livability".

Livability as a concept encompasses a wide range of issues relating to overall "quality of life and well-being".

These issues, structured in 5 themes have a theoretical basis in the social sciences and natural philosophy: security, mobility, economic vibrancy, environmentally friendly, socio-cultural conditions.
Livability is also a tangible attribute and property of a space which we live in.

Livability is place-based and there are ways to increase it, enhance it, facilitate it.

Livability or the lack of it, affects our daily well-being & comfort.

Livability affects the taste of the food in our mouths, the sound of music in our ears, the way our children grow up and the feeling of being alive.

Livability is not just a table-topic, brought up over a drink at a Mamak, only to be buried under other more "pressing" concerns like wages, your child's education, or your job.

No, livability is and should be a pressing concern, high up in your priorities as a member of the community.

Livability is a measure of how strong our sense of ownership is.

Ownership of our gardens, our homes, our towns & our cities.

Let's start talking about livability.





Comments

  1. Do you enjoy writing? If so, Ganga music you can make cash by becoming a freelance writer. Just be aware that most freelance writing sites prefer writers with experience. ganga bhakti

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

First Month

Having been here a month, I'd say that I've acculturated to the pace of life and have gotten into a comfortable routine. On weekdays, this involves catching the trains to school, sticking around after class to get some studying done and then hopping on the evening train back home. Sometimes, I'd opt to eat in the city instead of home, but this usually involves the company of friends or classmates. Otherwise, I'd much rather go home to rest, relax and read. Weekends are fun here in New York. One never runs out of things to do here especially on a Friday or Saturday night, the highlights so far are the bars in Williamsburg or Brooklyn, gallery hopping in Chelsea, eating out in Chinatown or just chillin' and having a meal or drink in the Village. Admittedly, I'm trying to cut down one expenditure so that means less alcohol and eating out. I've also been making full use of my membership at L.A. fitness, since the NYU recreation centre is a little too overcrowd...

Daughter Facetiming her Mom

Sitting here in a deserted section of the study lounge, I'm feeling the urge to write about an interaction progressing and unfolding in front of me right now. At the risk of being offensive or politically incorrect (ala Alexandra Wallace from UCLA), I'm just going to say it here that this post is about someone whose culture I'm still trying to grasp and understand. Allow me to explain. I write to achieve an end, it's sort of unspoken, but when I write I'm usually trying to understand something better or to arrive at some sort of epiphany (there's my A. Wallace again). Anyway, here goes. A young Chinese girl, maybe 19, is seated about 5 feet away in front of me, long hair with blonde highlights (I think), sporting rimmed spectacles, clothed in a Star-patterned pink knit-sweater, blue jeans and fur Winter boots. That's her physical profile, but I'm honestly more interested in the activity she's engaging in. In between mouthfuls of Mcnuggets, she is h...

New York So Far

It has been such a frantic week or so here. I'm writing this as I take a break from the copious amount of readings assigned in law school. A quick summary of what I've learnt so far (in general chronological occurence during a typical day) 1. Setting 3 alarms to wake up is efficient and effective 2. Showering the night before and laying out clothes for next morning allows me to reach the train station in 12-14 minutes, 15 minutes is cutting it. 3. The 7:52 am train is also a good option if you miss the 7:34 train in New Hyde Park. 4. When Penn Station-bound, sit in the last 2 cars of the LIRR so I'm closer to the 8th avenue ACE trains to West 4th Station. 5. Food portions are extremely large, so anything within $6.99 is very very adequate expenditure for my individual consumption. 6. Haggling has saved me upwards of $40 when riding cabs who don't charge by meter (outside of Manhattan). 7. Sit in the middle back rows of the class so I won't be called on ver...