Abstract

Against the background of the contribution of the informal sector and/or land use to the urbanization process of the developing economies, especially in Africa, this paper examines the spatial distribution and environmental pollution implications of automobile workshops, as an important informal land use in Ogbomoso, Nigeria. Inventory of the locations of the workshops was done, and air, water and soil samples were taken from six of the workshops selected from different density areas of the town for tests on the presence and concentrations of pollutants, and the results compared with appropriate standards. The spatial distribution of the workshops was observably non-random, but have some environmental implications, noted especially in water samples (with concentrations of heavy metals such as lead and zinc higher than permissible levels) and air samples (with gaseous pollutants such as CO and CO2, among others, beyond permissible levels). The paper, however observes that the operators of the informal activity are responsible household heads with an average income higher than the national minimum wage, capable of contributing meaningfully to the urban and national economy. It is therefore recommended that the land use activity be integrated into the formal economy and land use planning by easing the required processes of establishing, registering, and operating the business outfits through implementation of relevant people-friendly policies. This, the paper argues, would also necessitate further studies on different other dimensions of formalizing the land use.   Key words: Informal land use, integration, urban planning.

Highlights

  • The issue of informality in the urbanization process of African communities, which has not been adequately understood or appreciated, is a clog in the wheel of progress, with respect to sustainable development

  • The z-score of 34.23 the hypothesis that “the spatial distribution of informal automobile workshops (IAWs) in Ogbomoso is random” is rejected at 95% confidence level

  • Informal automobile workshops are an important category of urban land use in most Nigerian towns and cities, exemplified in Ogbomoso, and as such cannot be left out in the scheme of things – urban land use and economic planning

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Summary

Introduction

The issue of informality in the urbanization process of African communities, which has not been adequately understood or appreciated, is a clog in the wheel of progress, with respect to sustainable development. A particular and highly visible category of the land use type is informal automobile workshops Such issues as distribution, types, reasons for their location (where they are), specific impacts, and effective frameworks for the control and/or planning of informal workshops in a medium term town (like Ogbomoso, before it gets out of hand as witnessed in larger cities) are the questions agitating the mind of the land use planner

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