إشكالية التهيئة الحضرية بمدينة الجديدة بين الثابت والمتحول

The question of urban planning in El Jadida between the static and the transformed

Authors

  • عبد الوهاب خنوس Université Chouaib Doukkali
  • وديع مدهوم مختبر إعادة تشكيل المجال والتنمية المستدامة، کلية الآداب والعلوم الإنسانية، الجديدة، المغرب
  • اسماعيل خياطي مختبر إعادة تشكيل المجال والتنمية المستدامة، کلية الآداب والعلوم الإنسانية، الجديدة، المغرب

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48399/IMIST.PRSM/amjau-v6i2.52100

Abstract

In order to achieve this importance, it must be planned and dealt with in accordance with practical and thoughtful methods and procedures, away from randomness, because any mistake in dealing with it will be very costly and will be paid for by present and future generations.

Despite the existence of urbanization plans, this does not end the existing problems in cities, especially urban sprawl and the imbalance between uses and their efficiency.

One of the most important characteristics of urban design is dynamism in planning and design, not rigidity, because the urban space must change or expand, and this makes it important to ask whether this new adaptation to new functions resulting from changing uses is relatively easy, and whether the expansion and change can be controlled with minimal disruption to the city's urban design.

However, what is happening in El Jadida reflects the loss of control over the process of land-use change, which has made it difficult to implement the development designs on the ground.

In the face of this situation in El Jadida city, it is necessary to refer to the previous designs, whether estimated or mandatory, and try to interrogate them, so that we can understand what is happening now, and develop a relatively better planning for the city.

Therefore, in this paper, we will try to refer to the urban development designs from the colonial period to the last design of the city, with a return to the directorate plans for the development of the Greater El Jadida area from the Sidi Ali Benhamdouche community to the Yellow Shelf Complex.

Published

05-12-2024

Issue

Section

Articles