India

COVID-19: How we can build back sustainable and healthier cities 

Community health volunteers check the temperature of a woman during a check up campaign for the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at a slum in Mumbai, India, August 16, 2020. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas - RC2VEI9ZIVSQ

COVID-19 is disproportionately affecting those in less economically developed areas. Image: REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas

Somik Lall
Staff Director, World Bank
Sameh Wahba
Regional Director for Sustainable Development, Europe and Central Asia, World Bank
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  • COVID-19 has put social and spatial disparities in cities under a magnifying lens - with a disproportionate affect on those in lower-income areas.
  • Cramped and crowded neighborhoods that are home to the working class and poor have shouldered an outsized burden of infections and lost livelihoods.
  • The World Bank outlines five practical steps for city leaders to reshape economic densities and make cities inclusive and environmentally sustainable.
  • These include adequate floor space, protecting public space and improving living conditions.


A journey to economic development

For over 100 years, line 7 on the New York City subway has connected middle-class Jackson Heights, Elmhurst, and Corona in Queens with Manhattan’s Midtown and wealthy West Side. In normal times, the 7 train brings 500,000 commuters to work every day in New York’s large and diverse labor market. A 24-minute ride from 74th Street Roosevelt Avenue in Jackson Heights to Times Square connects neighborhoods that are $78,000 apart in annual median incomes. Riding the 7 is a journey to economic development.

The coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) has ground the city to a halt since March, with stay-at-home orders in place amid rising infections and deaths. Heavy attention has focused on the downsides of New York City’s density, with images of patients lined up for blocks outside Elmhurst Hospital, overwhelmed with COVID-19 cases, ingrained in the minds of millions worldwide. The ills of density have dominated popular and policy conversations around COVID-19 as cities worldwide struggle to flatten the curve and limit contagion.

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Below the elevated 7 line, the crowded and bustling immigrant neighborhood of Jackson Heights, home to saree shops and samosa chaat reminiscent of Karol Bagh in New Delhi, is now the neighborhood worst affected (see map 1a) by the virus. COVID-19 cases are as high as 4,125 per 100,000 residents in the local 11368 zip code. At the other end of the 7, in the wealthier Chelsea 10011 zip code, cases are much lower, at 925 per 100,000 residents. While this picture may be what you expect—dense neighborhoods are most at risk of contagion—the evidence tells us something completely different.

The neighborhoods of West Queens are not the densest in New York City (map 1b). West Queens has a density of 12,584 people per sq km, while in Chelsea, at the other end of the 7, density reaches as high as 30,923 people per sq km. Manhattan’s Upper East Side is higher still, with densities upwards of 58,000 people per sq km. Density and infections don’t go hand in hand along the line 7. They also don’t go hand in hand across the New York metropolitan area (fig 1).

What makes a difference is neighborhood income and associated characteristics, which temper the extent to which complementary investments in structures (i.e., housing), infrastructure, and amenities transform places from being overcrowded to being dense and livable. At the economic heart of the city, land is more valuable in Chelsea. With efficient planning and land development regulations, developers have the incentive to build tall structures and create a lot of floor space (see map 2).

MAP 1: COVID 19 incidence, density and incomes in New York City

MAP 2: Building heights along New York City subway line 7

In lower-income neighborhoods, developers do not have the incentive to add on floor space or to demand additional infrastructure improvements. Especially in New York City, people live in more cramped quarters, often in multi-generational families, and have jobs that necessitate face-to-face interaction. The risk of contagion increases as neighborhoods lack the physical structures and amenities that enhance livability, and where residents have no option but to go out every day in search of employment or services. It comes down to this: economic geography, not physical geography, determines contagion risk. Saying otherwise is an urban myth.

Figure 1: COVID-19 incidence and density do not go hand in hand across New York City; incomes and density are correlated

Geographic targeting can help developing cities save lives and protect the vulnerable during the pandemic

As in New York, stark differences in economic geography have been associated with COVID-19 cases across the world. Developing cities such as Cairo, Mumbai, Manila, and Nairobi are seeing large-scale lockdowns—applied and enforced with varying degrees of success—to contain the spread of the coronavirus and help their health systems cope. A major concern is economic geography: a large share of city residents in Africa and Asia live in slums and informal settlements, where cramped living conditions and inadequate public services, especially water and sanitation, can exacerbate contagion. In Dar es Salaam, 28% of residents live at least three to a room; 50% of Abidjan is overcrowded. Residents lack open space and suffer from inadequate infrastructure, sharing taps and latrines, often with 200 people per communal facility. In South Africa, only 44% of people have access to water inside their house and only 61% have access to a flush toilet. It’s urgent to save lives and protect the livelihoods of the poor and vulnerable, many of whom live in slums and informal settlements. Even under lockdown, given limited floor space and the need to cluster around public amenities such as communal toilets and taps, people in such settings cannot maintain safe physical distances from one another.

To respond to the emerging crisis in developing cities, at the World Bank we have developed a methodology that can help city leaders direct medical and other critical resources to potential “hotspots,” the places with highest exposure and contagion risk. We employ an economic geography lens, accounting for investments in structures, availability of public services, and likelihood of contagion.

We developed this methodology in April 2020 with the aim of rapidly deploying it based on three globally sourced datasets that reveal population density, available floor area, and access to basic services such as taps and toilets. Combined, these tell us where and how people live. Data on where people live come from WorldPop and Facebook, and data on key services are accessed through Open Street Map (OSM). The density and floor space data are available for 100m x 100m grids, giving us fine-grained information at the sub-neighborhood level. We also partnered with the German Aerospace Center (DLR) to access their innovative World Settlement Footprint 3D product (WSF-3D), which provides information on the height of buildings, making it possible to estimate floor area available in a given building.

As we saw along the line 7 subway in New York, adequate floor space can make high density livable, whereas insufficient floor space can make even moderate densities crowded and unlivable. In Mumbai, the slums of Dharavi face a triple challenge of extremely high population density, very limited floor space, and a scarcity of infrastructure, public space, and amenities. It is mind-boggling to think of the contagion risk presented by 68,400 people packed together on 1 sq km of land without taps or toilets at home. Our hotspots methodology predicts that 5.2 million people in Mumbai are at risk of infection, even with lockdown measures in place. Figure 2 shows Mumbai’s containment zones as of May 9, overlaid with predicted hotspots. Containment zones are identified based on the number of active cases where stringent measures are taken to prevent contagion. Over 30% of the current zones are located in the predicted hotspots, with considerable coincidence in Dharavi’s crowded settlements. It is likely that higher prevalence of testing in many developing cities, especially in underprivileged neighborhoods, would improve match rates and more accurately predict infection.

Figure 2: Mumbai’s COVID-19 infections in crowded and underserviced neighborhoods

We have identified hotspots in 15 developing cities to support city-led efforts to manage contagion and protect the vulnerable. We plan to extend this to another 30 cities.

Figure 3 shows that 25% of Cairo’s population is at risk of being infected, even with limits to social interaction. In Kinshasa, 84% of the population is at risk. These hotspot assessments can be helpful to city leaders who are at the vanguard of early response efforts.

Many of the city-led responses have focused on two areas: providing basic services including water, sanitation, hygiene, and nutrition, and improving coronavirus-related communications and coping strategies. Jakarta has been retrofitting its informal kampungs with low-cost public water containers and soap dispensers as part of a community awareness program. In Monrovia, Liberia, the Cities Alliance has been supporting outreach in informal settlements to raise awareness about basic hygiene measures and waste management. Rwanda’s capital, Kigali, has been providing portable sinks for handwashing at bus stops, restaurants, banks, and shops. Similar measures have been implemented in many cities around the world.

Our ongoing engagements with cities show that the hotspot approach works. In Egypt, hotspot maps have led the national COVID-19 inter-ministerial committee to discuss developing a spatially differentiated risk management approach for the Cairo metropolitan area. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kinshasa is harnessing predicted hotspots to develop a vulnerability index for spatially targeting emergency cash transfers through the government’s multi-sectoral COVID response plan. In the Philippines, these hotspots are helping Manila’s city officials identify ideas in most urgent need of emergency support, such as provision of clean water.

Figure 3: Predicting COVID-19 hotspots to help cities save lives and protect the vulnerable


More broadly, there is a strong correlation between poverty and poor living conditions, such as in slums and informal settlements in developing country cities. In countries and regions where cadastres of the poor and vulnerable households are incomplete and where targeting approaches through means-based testing is not feasible, geographic targeting using these hotspots can provide a reliable proxy and help cities target emergency efforts towards the vulnerable.

Reshaping density to build back better

The COVID-19 pandemic has put social and spatial disparities within cities under a magnifying lens like never before. Cramped and crowded neighborhoods that are home to the working class and poor—much of New York’s Queens, Mumbai’s Dharavi, or other cities’ housing dormitories for migrant workers—have shouldered an outsized burden of infections and lost livelihoods. As countries emerge from the pandemic, there is an urgent need to help cities reshape their economic densities and make their urban fabric socially inclusive and environmentally sustainable.

Here are five practical steps that city leaders can take.

1. Plan, provide, and protect public space: It’s critical to rethink the scale, design, and spatial distribution of public spaces, including sidewalks, parks, and open spaces, as well as public facilities such as libraries and community centers. This is particularly important in crowded developing country cities where floor space at home is limited and family sizes are generally large. This would improve social distancing and recreation, and provide opportunities for enhanced COVID-19 response and recovery. For example, the grounds of Goregaon, a nature park in Mumbai, India, and the sports village in Hyderabad are being used as makeshift quarantine facilities. Athens, Greece, plans to allocate 50,000 square meters of public space for cyclists and pedestrians, including a four-mile "grand walkway" connecting archaeological sites in the historic center. Dublin, Ireland, has set aside swathes of land for pedestrians and cyclists to facilitate physical distancing in a "temporary mobility plan" that may become long-lasting. In Bogota, Colombia, city officials have built 70 kilometers of additional bicycle lanes, while Auckland, New Zealand, is restricting the vehicular right of way to expand the width of sidewalks for social distancing. Such transformations will not only make it safer to move around these cities in a world changed by COVID, but also enhance livability for residents in crowded neighborhoods.

2. Change regulations to provide more floor space: While crowding increases density by reducing the average amount of floor space per person, height achieves economic density by adding stories and floor space. However, rigid density regulations often cap building heights and the quantity of property that can be developed on a plot of land. This artificially limits the floor space that can be built, as seen in central areas of São Paulo, Brazil, and Mumbai. We need to organize cities into smaller zones of differentiated densities, driven by infrastructure capacity and demand, particularly in transport. Urban neighborhoods need “Goldilocks” density—not too high or low, but just right. And what is just right changes over time and varies by neighborhood. City neighborhoods can increase economic density through financing and land capture instruments, which also help influence land values and demand. São Paulo took a similar approach when it auctioned development rights.

3. Leverage urban infrastructure finance to strengthen local government and community capacity for improving living conditions in slums and informal neighborhoods: The most critical need is access to potable water and sanitation. Public water taps and communal toilets are essential services, but because they bring people into close contact they are also hotspots of disease transmission. Worrying still, these facilities can widen gender inequalities. Women who seek communal services could be exposed to greater menstrual hygiene risk or physical threats after nightfall, and girls risk squandering their educations if they spend endless hours fetching water. Targeted interventions that enhance state and community capacity, combined with financing for infrastructure and services, need to be scaled up. Planning and financing need to be interconnected, not disjointed. For example, in addition to investing in neighborhood infrastructure and services, Indonesia’s National Slum Upgrading program (KOTAKU) has been building citizen engagement within slum communities and enhancing local government planning capacity. Not only have living conditions improved, the broad-based capacity boost has allowed these communities to respond more effectively to the pandemic by instituting online video conferences, community health monitoring, and protocols in construction works.

4. Secure land and property rights: Without secure land and property tenure, poor residents—whether in squatter or informal settlements—have little incentive to improve their shelter conditions. The risk of evictions or demolition dampens investments that the urban poor can make to improve their lives. The regularization of land and property tenure for squatters and informal settlers has been associated with increases in land and property values, significant investment in shelter consolidation, as well as other socioeconomic benefits, such as improved educational and health outcomes, for children in many parts of the world.

5. Strive for blue skies: When interventions to stop the spread of the virus took vehicles off the street and shuttered polluting businesses, residents of many large developing country cities experienced blue skies and clean air for the first time in decades. In Manila, for example, NO2 emissions fell by 65%. Clean air makes cities more livable and productive and supports human capital development. Cities now have a unique opportunity to preserve air quality as their economies rebound. In Egypt, the government is planning to expand the Greater Cairo subway network to accommodate 6 million passengers a day by 2025, up from 3.5 million today. It also plans to give grants to private car owners to help them convert their vehicles to run on natural gas. Not only will clean air improve local amenities, it will also provide a global co-benefit in lowering carbon intensity. Overall, it is critical that COVID-19 stimulus packages do not miss a unique opportunity to jumpstart the economy while also contributing to a more sustainable future and mitigating climate change impacts.

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