Age-Friendly Cities: Sharing from Asian Cities
10 July 2018
4.00pm – 6.00pm. Registration from 3.45pm, seated by 4.00pm
Marina Bay Sands Sands Expo & Convention Centre, Level 3, Begonia 3003 / 3103
2 BOA-SIA CPD pts, 1 SILA CPD pts
Resources
Lecture Poster (PDF: 981KB)
Lecture Report (PDF: 1.4MB)
Lecture Video & Photos
Source: People’s Association (left) and the Seoul Institute (right)
Just as important is helping the public understand how ageing is not a disease but a biological process. A Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the Centre for Liveable Cities and the Seoul Institute was signed at the event to formalise a joint-research project on age-friendly cities. Source: Centre for Liveable Cities
The dialogue moderated by Dr Emi Kiyota (left) also featured Dr Eric Chu, Dr Belinda Yuen and Dr Miree Byun. Source: Centre for Liveable Cities
A good crowd showed up for the lecture held in conjunction with this year’s World Cities Summit. Source: Centre for Liveable Cities
Panelists and organisers at the end of the lecture. Source: Centre for Liveable Cities
Synopsis
Over the years, both Seoul and Singapore have introduced infrastructure improvements, care and healthcare services and senior friendly housing options to prepare themselves for a rapidly ageing population. The Centre for Liveable Cities (CLC) and the Seoul Institute (SI) examines the efforts by both cities and discuss the challenges going forward.
Lecture Report
Some 17 years ago, when Dr. Eric Chu was then-Mayor of Taoyuan, he was
creating jobs for young Taiwanese. Today, as Mayor of New Taipei City, Dr. Eric
Chu is encouraging companies to reemploy the elderly instead.
The pace of ageing and the need to meaningfully engage seniors are just some
challenges of an ageing society shared by the mayor during a recent Centre for
Liveable Cities (CLC) lecture. Organised as part of the CLC- Seoul Institute (SI)
joint-research project on age-friendly cities, the lecture invited distinguished
panellists – Dr. Eric Chu, Mayor of New Taipei City; Dr. Miree Byun, Director,
Seoul Institute; Dr. Belinda Yuen, Director, Lee Kuan Yew Centre for Innovative
Cities and Dr. Emi Kiyota, the President of Ibasho – to share insights on
planning for age-friendly cities. In addition, CLC and SI also shared briefly on
the ageing policies in Singapore and Seoul as well as case studies of housing
and community-based care and support for seniors in the two cities.
The panel saw a lively discussion on planning for age-friendly cities and the
many innovative initiatives in the high-dense cities of Singapore, Seoul, Tokyo
and New Taipei City. Panellists underscored the importance of empowering
seniors as they too can play a part in making their city friendly for themselves
and their peers.
For example, Mayor Chu has ensured that there are ways for seniors in New
Taipei City to continue contributing to society. New Taipei City started a time
banking scheme which lets seniors and citizens volunteer their services
to others in the neighbourhood, in exchange for time-credits that can be
drawn in the future for their own needs and services. Volunteers are trained
by professionals for 40 hours. The time-banking scheme has seen 2,500
volunteers and over 272,304 hours deposited. Other initiatives include
collaborations between the public and private sectors to provide free fitness
classes, reading glasses and meals — all of which help seniors continue to agein-place, build relationships and be socially supported.
But infrastructure and services alone are not enough. Just as important is
helping the public understand how ageing is not a disease but a biological
process, said Dr. Kiyota who heads an organisation advocating for
communities that value their elders. The environmental gerontologist added
that ageing becomes a problem when the physical and social environment
cannot accommodate the developmental needs of elders in our society. She
highlighted some key challenges in cities for seniors such as urban hazards,
social isolation or the lack of adequate housing. While noting that there are
no easy solutions, meaningful support is important, especially when a huge
proportion of seniors are taking care of their older parents too. “Sometimes
we make old people feel invisible and talk about it like it is not our problem,
but aging is all our problem and we could all get there.”
The need for cities to better cater to seniors in their planning was also
emphasised by Dr Yuen when she explained how the built environment
affects the elderly’s quality of life in terms of physical connectivity,
cognitive and social health.
Dr. Byun raised a similar issue when she shared that Seoul’s most
important policies for seniors target their loneliness, sickness and
employment. However, a survey also found that younger people are more
apathetic about taking care of the aged.
During the discussion, the impact of technology in creating an age-friendly
city was a hot topic amongst the panelists. Mayor Chu called for private
companies to step up, experiment and use technology to solve existing
issues especially in the healthcare sector. However, Dr Kiyota noted that while technology is helpful, the key should be about utilizing technology to
create and sustain meaningful relationships that can support seniors.
Even as cities redesigned themselves to become more age-friendly, it may
cause unintended consequences such as segregation and stigma, reminded
Dr. Kiyota. The key is to build a community which realises that ageing
concerns everyone.
Written by Tan Yu Ying Kristal. This report first appeared in the
Aug 2018 Better Cities newsletter.
About the Speakers
PANELLIST
Dr Eric Chu
Mayor of New Taipei City
Dr. Eric Liluan Chu serves as the first and the incumbent Mayor of New
Taipei City since the city was upgraded and reorganized from its former
entity Taipei County in 2010. Mayor Chu and his administration have put
forward transformative innovative policies to build a city to cope with
urban challenges of the modern age, including energy, demography,
economic development and urban revitalization,among others. These
reform programs have yielded successful results, and were recognized
nationally and internationally.
PANELLIST
Dr Miree Byun
Senior Research Fellow,
Department of Urban Social Policy Research,
The Seoul Institute
Dr Miree Byun is a demographer, whose research areas lies in social
changes and urban monitoring for enhancing the quality of citizens’ lives.
Her work focuses on an international comparative study on government
policy for urban competitiveness. Her publications include Framework
of the Inclusive City Indicators and the Inclusiveness of Seoul (2017), The
Quality of Life in Megacity and Seoul-Specific Happiness Indicator (2015),
and Building the Neighborhood and Social Integration in Seoul (2011).
PANELLIST
Dr Belinda Yuen
Director, Research Director,
Lee Kuan Yew Centre for Innovative Cities,
Singapore University of Technology and Design
Dr Belinda Yuen is the Research Director and Professorial Fellow at the Lee
Kuan Yew Centre for Innovative Cities. She is a qualified urban planner and
has published extensively on spatial planning, urban policy analysis, and most
recently, on planning livable, sustainable cities. She has been elected as the
President of Singapore Institute of Planners and the Vice-President of the
Commonwealth Association of Planners. She has also served on numerous
local and international urban planning committees including the International
Advisory Board of United Nations State of World’s Cities Report.
MODERATOR
Dr Emi Kiyota
President, Ibasho
As an environmental gerontologist, Dr Emi Kiyota focuses on improving
both the built environment and the organizational culture of long
term care for elders. Inspired by living in a nursing home during her
graduate studies, Kiyota has become an expert on age-friendly housing,
hospitals, and clinical care centers and frequently speaks on these
issues at international gatherings. In 2010, she founded Ibasho, a nonprofit organization dedicated to creating socially, economically, and
environmentally sustainable communities that value their elders.
About the Writer
Tan Yu Ying Kristal
Kristal is a research intern in the social cluster of the Centre for Liveable Cities
(CLC). She is currently pursuing a Master of Urban Planning at the National
University of Singapore’s (NUS) School of Architecture. Prior to graduate
studies, she majored in Bachelor of Science in Real Estate also in NUS.