The primary goal and outcome of the conference was the agreement by UN member states on the New Urban Agenda (NUA), which will serve as a guideline for urban development for the next twenty years. The NUA makes frequent references to related UN agreements, including the
Rio Declaration on Environment and Development passed in 1992, and the
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the
International Guidelines on Urban and Territorial Planning, the
Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015–2030), and the
Paris climate agreement, all issued in 2015. • National urban policies promoting "integrated systems of cities and human settlements" in furtherance of "sustainable integrated urban development". • Stronger urban
governance "with sound institutions and mechanisms that empower and include urban stakeholders" along with checks and balances, to promote predictability, social inclusion, economic growth, and environmental protection. • Reinvigorated "long-term and integrated urban and territorial planning and design in order to optimize the spatial dimension of the urban form and deliver the positive outcomes of urbanization"; and • Effective financing frameworks "to create, sustain and share the value generated by sustainable urban development in an inclusive manner."
Urban planning Urban planning is the mechanism by which much of the New Urban Agenda can be accomplished. In particular NUA ¶51 calls for: urban planning and design instruments that support sustainable management and use of natural resources and land, appropriate compactness and density, polycentrism, and mixed uses, through infill or planned urban extension strategies as applicable, to trigger economies of scale and agglomeration, strengthen
food system planning, enhance
resource efficiency,
urban resilience, and
environmental sustainability. In ¶66 the parties endorse a
smart city model: We commit ourselves to adopting a smart-city approach that makes use of opportunities from digitization, clean energy and technologies, as well as innovative transport technologies, thus providing options for inhabitants to make more environmentally friendly choices and boost sustainable economic growth and enabling cities to improve their service delivery.
Right to the city The NUA includes language about a "
right to the city", a debated concept referring to popular control over urban processes, but without definite implications for who will prevail when different parties' interests are in conflict.
Financing The NUA calls for both
public and
private financing. Public financing may be derived from the economic gains from urbanization, including land and property value and infrastructure projects. Development funds and
development banks are envisioned as "intermediaries for urban financing". (NUA ¶130–153). Private funding is envisioned especially for
real estate and
housing; the NUA encourages the participation of a diverse range of multilateral financial institutions, regional development banks and development finance institutions, cooperation agencies, private-sector lenders and investors, cooperatives, moneylenders and microfinance banks to invest in affordable and incremental housing in all its forms. (NUA ¶140) == Organizational responses ==