Urban development in Nairobi is accelerating through infrastructure expansion, spatial planning, housing initiatives, and environmental interventions. While often framed as progress and modernisation, these processes frequently proceed without meaningful public participation, especially from low-income and marginalised residents.
For the majority of Nairobi’s population living in informal settlements and engaged in informal economies, urban development decisions directly shape access to housing, livelihoods, services, safety and dignity. When the voices of the urban vulnerable are excluded, development processes risk entrenching inequality, displacement and social injustice.
This brief asserts that public participation is not only constitutionally mandated but also serves as a foundational element necessary for achieving equitable urban development in Nairobi. Meaningful engagement ensures that the diverse experiences and needs of the city’s residents, particularly those who are most vulnerable, are incorporated throughout the development process. By treating public participation as an essential principle rather than a procedural afterthought, urban planning can more effectively promote inclusivity, social justice and sustained improvements in quality of life.
The Problem
- Tokenistic Public Participation
Despite constitutional and legal provisions mandating public participation, engagement in urban development is often reduced to perfunctory consultations, information-sharing forums, or late-stage validation meetings. Communities are invited to react to pre-determined plans rather than shape them. Barriers such as technical language, inaccessible venues, limited notice periods, and power asymmetries further exclude informal settlement residents, women, youth, persons with disabilities and informal workers from influencing outcomes.
- Planning Detached from Lived Realities
Urban planning in Nairobi is frequently driven by technocratic models and elite urban imaginaries that prioritise efficiency, order, and global competitiveness. These frameworks rarely account for the lived realities of the urban poor, including informal tenure systems, place-based livelihoods, social networks and survival strategies. As a result, development interventions often disrupt communities, undermine resilience and produce avoidable social harm.
- Unequal Distribution of Costs and Benefits
When participation is weak, the burdens of development, such as evictions, loss of livelihoods, rising living costs and exclusion, fall disproportionately on low-income households. At the same time, benefits accrue to a narrow segment of the population. This reproduces spatial injustice and erodes public trust in governance institutions.
Why Public Participation Matters
Meaningful public participation strengthens urban development by:
- Improving project relevance and sustainability through local knowledge;
- Preventing conflict, resistance, and implementation delays;
- Upholding constitutional rights and human dignity;
- Enhancing transparency, accountability, and legitimacy;
- Building shared ownership of urban futures.
For the urban vulnerable, participation is also a claim to recognition as legitimate residents and city-makers whose knowledge and experiences matter.
Advocacy Position
Pamoja Trust advocates for a rights-based, people-centred approach to urban development grounded in the Right to the City framework. This approach recognises that all urban residents, regardless of tenure or income, have the right to:
- Participate meaningfully in decisions that affect their neighbourhoods and livelihoods;
- Access clear, timely, and accessible information;
- Influence planning outcomes, not merely respond to them;
- Protection from arbitrary displacement and dispossession;
- Share equitably in the benefits of urban development.
Public participation must be continuous, inclusive, and outcome-oriented.
River Regeneration
The Nairobi River Regeneration is an ambitious, multi-agency initiative launched in March 2025 aimed at transforming the heavily polluted Nairobi River and its tributaries into a clean and sustainable urban waterfront. The project is spearheaded by the Nairobi Rivers Commission (NRC). The regeneration program targets a 27 km stretch of the river and involves a comprehensive approach to address the root causes of pollution and degradation, which include untreated sewage, solid waste dumping, industrial pollution, and encroachment on riparian land.
Analysis of the Nairobi River regeneration under the Special Planning Area (SPA) by the ART team in Gituamba, Chieko, and Budalangi informal settlements reveals significant social and spatial impacts. The proposed 60-metre corridor threatens to displace an approximate number of at least 1,417 persons that depend on proximity to the river for livelihoods. Beyond physical displacement, the intervention risks disrupting family structures, social networks, and informal economies that have developed over decades. Although official project documents mention compensation, evidence from community consultations and local stakeholders indicates that compensation mechanisms are poorly defined, with no clear guidelines on eligibility, valuation, or disbursement. This lack of transparency particularly affects tenants, informal workers, and traders who lack formal tenure, leaving them vulnerable to exclusion from potential compensation. Without meaningful public participation, environmental restoration risks becoming another pathway through which the urban poor pay the cost of city-making.
Housing
Current housing policy in Nairobi is dominated by state-led affordable housing models that prioritise rapid delivery, private financing, and formal homeownership. While presented as solutions to the housing deficit, these models often remain inaccessible to the urban poor, exclude informal workers, and proceed with limited public participation. By framing housing primarily as a market product, affordable housing programmes frequently fall short of constitutional obligations under Article 43(1)(b) on the right to accessible and adequate housing and Article 10 on public participation
The community-led housing model advanced by Muungano wa Wanavijiji in partnership with Pamoja Trust in the Kambi Moto Housing project, offers a grounded and rights-based alternative that aligns housing development with the lived realities of the urban poor. Rooted in collective organisation, the model places residents at the centre of planning through sustained savings schemes, participatory enumerations, settlement mapping, and negotiated development. These processes generate community-owned data enabling residents to engage public authorities as legitimate urban actors rather than passive beneficiaries. This stands in sharp contrast to top-down housing interventions, where consultation often occurs after key decisions have already been made.
This approach enabled in-situ upgrading that improved housing and infrastructure without displacement, while preserving social networks, livelihoods, and access to the city. This model reframes housing as part of the Right to the City, recognising informal settlement residents as legitimate urban citizens with a claim to the spatial justice and decision-making power, building social capital, local skills, and community capacity and ensuring that development interventions respond to lived realities rather than abstract plans.
Towards Inclusive Urban Futures
Urban development that excludes the voices of the urban vulnerable is neither just nor sustainable. Nairobi’s future cannot be built through plans that erase the lived realities of the majority of its residents. Inclusive urban development requires a shift from top-down decision-making to co-production, from token consultation to shared power, and from seeing informality as a problem to recognising it as part of the city.
Pamoja Trust remains committed to facilitating and advocating for processes that centre public participation, strengthen people’s organisations, and ensure that the voices of the urban poor are heard, valued, and reflected in shaping cities grounded in dignity and justice.
The accompanying StoryMap deepens this conversation by showing what inclusive urban development can look like in practice. It highlights the gap between dominant planning visions and the lived realities of informal settlements, and the social costs of development that excludes public participation. The StoryMap reinforces the case for people-centred planning that upholds dignity, protects livelihoods, and recognises the urban vulnerable as legitimate city-makers.
Links:
– StoryMap
– Advisory Note
– Socio-economic Impact Assesment
– Spatial Analysis
