To leave scope for
future retrofits in the moment you conceive the idea of product or vision of a
city.
Today
you realize after 5 or 20 or 30 years that this product or system or
infrastructure which you had planned back then with the most sophisticated
tools and technology available at that time, with the best brains at disposal
and the best hands available, that robust system of past desperately needs a
technology overhaul and efficiency retrofit today, just to validate its
contemporary relevance and to drag itself for few more miles in the tomorrow,
but it would have been quite difficult for you to confront and accept this
apparently unpleasant fact that this product, infrastructure, system or even
strategy which you claim to be the most advanced and avant-garde today is very
soon going to be outdated, very soon indeed!! Acknowledge it or not, that’s how
it works, especially when technology, planning and policy is concerned only
thing which remains eternal is aesthetics and nostalgia associated with such technology,
possibly that’s why many people still prefer analog watch over digital one,
that’s totally a personal choice.
Change
is not only an integral law of nature but equally a law of technology,
inevitable like growth of humanity, because humanity is curious and that’s why
innovation and hence need to replace and retrofit old technology. Problem with
the contemporary approach of planning and product design is that we tend to
conceive and create a system or product which is 100% complete in its form and
design “today” leaving no scope for future integration except few exceptions,
even knowing that need for retrofit is waiting only at the next turn of system
or product life-cycle You see those
overly stuffed embedded products, jam packed conduits, circuits and channels,
overcrowded service corridors, saturated underground utility trench,
suffocating right of ways (ROW), chaotic narrow streets, thousands of
unventilated unlit city rooms and residences, all of this have two things in
common, one, is the shear lack of vision and second, ignorance to change.
Change which is inevitable, but we are happy and content with what we have
planned today, who cares for tomorrow? Meanwhile, you enjoy all the attention
and praise because of your new product and system. They might even have bagged
few awards for best innovation and work in the field, but it all doesn't really
matter if that product or vision fails in next couple of years. The single
largest criteria of product or planning judgment and evaluation has to be
sustainability, which means your product or system or vision have to have an
inbuilt scope for absorption of future technology and efficiency integration
for sustainability, to keep up with future pace of life and lifestyle.
Lets
talk something about "sustainability" here. The word
"sustainability" has been exploited much in recent years increasingly assuming a very narrow meaning
just revolving around "anything green". Lets keep in mind that being
or doing green is just a piece of sustainability. Sustainability is much more,
it is vastly inclusive a phenomenon, it is about the whole life cycle of
product or system or plan. if you make a greenest product on earth which has a
life span or tech-viability span or people-acceptance span of one or two year
that is not sustainable when compared to a product which is though not so green
in its DNA but which has a larger life span or acceptance span of may be half a
decade or so or more. All the resources
which has gone into making of that short lived green product goes to
vain at the end of its functional or acceptance span but the similar
resources which has been consumed in making
that not so green product with a much longer life span seems more sustainable
an option. Using 5 most
"greenest" products of same use one after another in just five years
is much less sustainable than using 1 single "not so green" product
for 5 years.
Now
today you realize that environmental laws have become more stringent, people
have become more educated, aware and choosy
technology has become more and more complex and sophisticated, every
coming tomorrow product or system of yesterday is becoming obsolete, what to
do. We can’t really plan for something which has not been invented yet, but we
can always try to leave some scope for future integration, for the time when it
is invented. It might add to few percent of capital or man hour but it’s worth
giving a thought. Acknowledging the need for future retrofit and leaving some
scope for it today will make our life easy tomorrow, products more relevant and
cities more sustainable.