Abstract

Ethiopia’s mass-scale subsidized housing delivery programme has driven the rapid expansion of middle-income, mid-rise settlements on the outskirts of Addis Ababa, requiring the provision of infrastructure to newly developed areas. In the case of the Kotari housing project, established sanitation systems were deemed inappropriate for the site, resulting in the deployment of novel technology, a Membrane Bioreactor (MBR). Such decentralised technologies contribute to the heterogenous infrastructure configurations which characterise Addis Ababa’s sanitation landscape, reflected not only in material configurations but also in how they are governed. In this paper, we use the concept of ‘infrastructure interfaces’ as an analytical device to identify the key material connection points in the system. Working across scales, we scrutinise the governance arrangements at these critical junctures: the household, the block, the condominium, and the city. Our analysis challenges established understandings of infrastructural heterogeneity driven by the private sector, either through financialized elite infrastructures or informal survivalist practices. In Kotari, the state is the driver and the target is the lower middle class. Centring the state in these infrastructure configurations provides nuance to our understanding of how heterogeneity emerges. Our methodological approach accounts for governance at various scales, providing fresh insights into the relationality of infrastructure, particularly the human/technology interface and infrastructural failures. The case shows the importance of transcending binary readings of infrastructure configurations, such as on/off grid, state/private and formal/informal. Future work on the post-network city must go beyond simply denigrating or valorising alternative modes of service delivery.

Highlights

  • Ethiopia has become a posterchild of rapid state-led development in Africa (Goodfellow, 2017a)

  • Addis Ababa, Ethiopia’s capital city, is a site of significant urban expansion with major projects driven by the state, through partnerships with international investors and lenders (Ejigu, 2014)

  • The first wave of condominium housing projects was on infill sites

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Summary

Introduction

Ethiopia has become a posterchild of rapid state-led development in Africa (Goodfellow, 2017a). In high density condominium housing, the toilet becomes a site for disposal, blocks without communal kitchens for slaughter and butchering As such, this infrastructure interface becomes integral to the social and cultural fabric of households, with cultural practices burdening actors along the entire spectrum of service delivery affecting the entire system. The other critical role performed at this point is to regulate the flows or even switch the operation between one or other of the two MBR plants This is a key element of the material configuration of the interface, involving different providers, Addis Ababa City and Oromia state. High-tech decentralised solutions carry enormous potential in the context of a post-networked city but only if they can secure the support of vertically and horizontally joined up governance structures to guarantee the long-term operation and affordability of the system and its replication

Conclusions
49. Washington DC
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