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MT 19 April 2015

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maltatoday, SUNDAY, 19 APRIL 2015 News 13 The challenges of livability in a nightlife mecca TEODOR RELJIC IN the first edition of a two-part symposium, the socio-cultural dy- namics of Paceville were discussed by professionals and academics in various fields, who gathered at Eu- rope House in Valletta last Wednes- day for 'The Future of Paceville', organised by University of Malta's Work in Progress in Social Studies initiative and chaired by anthropolo- gist Elise Billiard. Taking an overall cue from Bil- liard's anthropological research into Paceville – culminating in the paper 'When the Dark Night Rises' and the photographic essay Night and Day – the assembled speakers plumbed both Paceville's past and future to address perennial problems related to the livability and sustainability of Malta's prime nightlife hub. Opening his talk with the truism that "true quality [in urban spaces] occurs when places are allowed to form", architect Antoine Zammit said that Paceville has been severely compromised as a communal and urban space because of a lack of long-term planning. In his talk, entitled 'Good streets form the backbone of the places we love', Zammit acknowledges that when looked at solely as an en- tertainment and nightlife district, Paceville is an unmitigated success. He also said that, barring the incon- venient proximity of the nightclubs to the residential area, Paceville is a place that "on paper" should func- tion comfortably as a residential dis- trict, since all amenities are within a five-minute walking distance at any given point. However, Zammit said that, "Paceville has failed as a thriving ur- ban community," adding that an en- demic "lack of foresight" has "failed daytime Paceville", leading to super- ficial and knee-jerk "design fixes" such as new paving and street furni- ture, which give the impression of an improving and cleaner urban space while doing nothing to address the more significant and deep-rooted problems. Zammit added that the emergence of affluent gated communities like Pendergardens will only contribute to the increasing fragmentation of Paceville, as they exist to be exclu- sionary by their very nature, and so will fail to "knit themselves into the rest of the community". Putting the situation down to the "fragmented nature of land owner- ship, as well as the inadequacy of the forward-looking planning system", Zammit said that Paceville is now at a crucial point, as more of its sites are ripe for redevelopment. Zammit observed that this should make those responsible mindful of the tensions between "individual ownership and flexible planning", calling for a re- think of the buzzword 'sustainability' in favour of 'responsible design'. Zammit also commented on the 'Portomaso garden'. Previously a tra- ditional public garden colonized by inebriated youths at night, it is now a "sanitized – that is, dead," space, ac- cording to Zammit, and which fails to serve its function as a community- friendly public park at night. The garden proved to be a rich prompt for discussion, as the younger members in the audience comment- ed how the garden – previously a key element of the Paceville experience, offering space for youths to consume alcohol at lower prices before hitting the clubs – has now been effectively erased for the benefit of the affluent tenants of Portomaso. In fact, architect Jacques Borg Bar- thet explicitly stated that the Porto- maso park was "designed to be use- less", insisting that he does not mean this as a flippant comment but as a true reflection of its ultimate pur- pose: to keep people away as much as possible, which ensures that it re- mains pristine for the sake of Porto- maso tenants and apartment owners who overlook it. Borg Barthet bemoaned how eco- nomic interests have ridden rough- shod over the public interest in Paceville, with tourism and enter- tainment "placed at the forefront at the expense of the local commu- nity". Borg Barthet put this down to a "neoliberal drive evident in cities everywhere – a model that we aspire to", and as being endemic to "gov- ernments which have no money, and so celebrate and encourage private initiatives". He claimed that the only palpable step forward is to lobby for a governmental infrastructure that matters, since, according to Borg Barthet, "MEPA [the Malta Environ- ment and Planning Authority] has very little powers of intervention – it is actually designed as such," and that even local councils are limited in the kind of tangible change that they can bring about. Archaeologist Reuben Grima said that an earlier statement by Elise Billiard – in which she claimed that Paceville is an "urban laboratory for the future of Malta" – was what spurred him to start thinking about Paceville, an area he doesn't often consider in his capacity as an archae- ologist, for reasons that are perhaps obvious. "When I first heard that statement by Elise, I found it a bit odd to think about, to be honest, but things have happened since which have been so- bering in this regard," Grima said. Some of these 'things' include a "very limited discussion on carrying capacity and height limits for de- velopment", along with ideas which seek to emulate the Paceville model in other parts of Malta, such as the oft-flagged "Paceville in the South" idea, as well as developments like cruise liner terminals at Marsamxett Harbour. Grima also cited a telling example of how the Paceville model pushes out access to even our historical heritage, supposedly the epitome of what should be 'public'. Remind- ing those present that a Lascaris-era tower is still standing in Paceville, Grima revealed a tragi-comic twist: the tower, originally built to be very visible indeed, is now hidden by the surrounding hotel complex of Cor- inthia San Gorg. "Here you even see the commodi- fication of the parking spots – I was forced to pay for parking just to be able to see the tower – which by its very definition should be vis- ible by all," Grima said, adding that no progress has been made in terms of responsible design for Paceville "since the 1960s", describing its on- going development as "rapacious and mean-minded". The next and final session, 'The Future of Paceville', will take place at Europe House, Valletta on April 22 at 5.30pm, and will include among its speakers journalist James Debono and anthropologists John Micallef and Margerite Pace-Bonello. treljic@mediatoday.com.mt Seminar on Paceville deems its urban livability problematic, condemns 'rapacious and mean- minded' development of area By a degree of the30th January, 2015, given by the first Hall of the Civil Courts, ordered that the extract hereunder mentioned be published for the purpose f service according to Article 187 (5) of the Code of Organisation and the Civil Proce- dure (Cap. 12). That by the application filed by Michael Gatt (ID 49577M), on behalf of Howard's Ltd (C12466), on the 25thJune, 2014, is asking for the with- drawal of the amount of €4,013.37 deposited by the Schedule of Deposit number 1343/13 in the names of Howard's ltd (C12466) vs What's On Where Ltd (C 44153). Karl Allmark (ID 72317A) and Pamela Allmark (ID 205368 M). The court ordered the notification of this applica- tion with a four (4) days for filing a reply. Registry of The First Hall of Civil Courts (Malta), today the 25th March 2015. MARVIC FARRUGIA For the Registrar of Courts and Civil Tribunals Have we paid too high a price for turning Paceville into Malta's key nightlife hub? Photo by David Pisani The Portomaso garden was "made to be useless," one of the speakers said during last Wednesday's seminar

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