Abstract
Informal settlement is the most pervasive mode of urbanization throughout cities of the global South, yet little is known of how informal urban design works as a production of urban space. This paper maps the emergence and transformation of street/laneway networks and buildings in a broad range of settlements. While such data cannot reveal the social, economic and political complexity of individual cases, it demonstrates the range of informal morphologies and self-organizational practices that produce them. Building types, plots, blocks, streets and lanes are analyzed to extract the informal rules or logics that are embodied within such morphologies. This is a nascent study that begins to reveal the ways in which informal settlement works to produce habitable land, affordable housing and public space. The prospect is a better knowledge base for understanding how such practices may or may not produce ‘slums’, how upgrading practices may be improved and how informal production may be anticipated and harnessed.
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