My Article: an Eco-Monster in Tbilisi, the Panorama Project
The Panorama Tbilisi project: a monster in town
Works are ongoing in Tbilisi, the capital city of
Georgia, for the construction of a pharaonic real estate project. Its
impact on the landscape and environment risks being huge, and civil
society has mobilized
04/04/2018 -
Marilisa Lorusso
In the European Year for the Cultural Heritage in
Georgia citizens protest – and are arrested – for the Panorama Tbilisi
project.
The Panorama Tbilisi Project consists
in the construction of four multi-functional centers located in
different historical and green zones of Georgia’s capital city, Tbilisi.
The project stretches from the very heart of the city, Freedom Square,
up to one of the green lungs of Tbilisi, the Sololaki mountain. It is
one of the biggest ever real estate project in the country and it will
lodge hotels, service apartments, offices, exhibition centers,
conference halls, health and leisure centers, sport arenas, and swimming
pools.
A disputable project
According
to the promoters, the project is meant to boost the growing tourism
industry in the country. Concerns were raised – and still persist –
connected to the transparency of the process of construction permissions
and public procurement, to the privatization of public goods, to the
impact of the project on the cultural and natural heritage of the city,
and to the plausibility of the claim that the project meets the local
tourist industry needs. On March 25, 2014, the Georgia Co-Investment
Fund announced the launch of the project, estimated to cover 270.000
square meters, for the approximate value of $500 millions.
The
Panorama project would interconnect four multifunctional centers
through roads, ropeways and inclined elevators. The project promised the
addition of 30,000 planted trees to the city and a parking
infrastructure. Critics underline that the project will deprive citizens
of areas of leisure and forests. Trees planting – as foreseen in the
project – is not reforestation, and new trees cannot replace established
forest habitats. The new gardens created will mostly be private, and
not accessible to citizens during their hike tours to the Sololaki hill.
It belongs to whom?
The
Panorama Project is the current core business of the Co-Investment
Fund. The Fund had been created six months before the Panorama project
was launched, and the full list of the private co-investors who gave
life to it is unknown. One of them – with a personal commitment to the
fund of $1 billion – is Bidzina Ivanishvili, founder, former leader and
Prime Minister (2012-2013) of the Georgian Dream, the leading political
party in the country. Ivanishvili’s Cartu Group holds as well – through
the offshore company Eizzella Enterprise – Finservice, the company which
applied for the pre-construction permits. Some of the land lots
required for the project belonged to Ivanishvili, who sold them the fund .
The
entire process of approval of the project proved to be disputable.
Finservice submitted for pre-construction permits to Tbilisi City Hall
in March 2014. In April 2014 permits were denied twice. The same month
the Government introduced a new law according to which projects assessed
as V Class would not require undergoing a public administrative process
but a simple administrative one. This entails that the project gains a
status of “state importance” and therefore some documents, such the one
missing in Finservice’s files, can be provided at a later stage.
Moreover, simple administrative processes do not require public hearing.
V Class projects fall under the scrutiny of the Government, not of the
local administration. The category of projects of national interests is
for the first time ever over-stretched to tourism/recreational ones.
In
December 30 the new city plan approved by Tbilisi City Hall amended the
zoning of the city so that the areas targeted by the new construction
would no longer be enlisted as “landscape-recreational”, where big scale constructions are not allowed . Works actually started before all permissions were provided.
The anti-project movement
Protests followed what was believed to be a largely illegal and not transparent approval process and what were felt as ad personam
legislative changes. The protests involved members of the Tbilisi City
Council and spread to residents of the area concerned and to citizens
and activists, and continued all through 2015 and 2016. In May 2016 up
to 20 organizations marched to the Panorama site and Ivanishvili
residence, but several activists were arrested .
In July 2016 ten more citizens were arrested during a protest. The
Georgian Young Lawyers’ Association in conjunction with a partner
organization, European Human Rights Advocacy Center, filed in the
European Court of Human Rights on behalf of 10 participants, basing the
complaint on irregularities and violation of rights during the arrests
and on the violation of rights to freedom and security, expression, and assembly .
Concerns for culture, environment, and landscape
Protesters and international organizations stress
that the project will have a severe and irreversible impact on the
capital city. The project's environmental impact assessment (EIA) is
deemed too poor. After the flood of 2015, Tbilisi now counts 32 ravines
with elevated risk of landslide. Some of them are located in the closest
proximity of the Sololaki hill. The hydro-geological risk needs to be
assessed by an independent source and not within the tight timeframe of a
construction already in process. EIA should include an in-depth
evaluation on water management, soil depletion, air quality resulting
from the massive construction on the mountain and in the valley beneath,
plus waste management and other criticalities deriving from tourism and
big hotels.
The impact on the cultural
heritage as well is highly problematic. In 2000 Tbilisi was nominated
candidate to UNESCO World Heritage list. UNESCO expects the historical
district to be renewed with the necessary and appropriate constrains in
order to ensure the preservation of the old city. The current project is
very likely to jeopardize the success of the candidature. In view of
the prospected development of tourism in the country, the evaluation of
such a missed chance does not seem to have been taken in due
consideration.
A smart tourism investment?
Tourism
in Georgia revolves around some core attractions: natural beauty, its
cultural and historical monuments, and its oeno-gastronomic tradition.
Given the profile of the average tourist in Georgia, it is unclear how
such a luxury project – that threaten the country’s first two high value
assets – matches with the needs of local tourism. Tourists in Georgia,
especially those injecting in the Georgian market much needed hard
currency (US dollars and Euros), tend to belong to the sustainable/middle class tourism category much more frequently than to the luxury one .
In the meantime construction work continues, as well as perplexities and criticisms. And accidents, such as the one that killed a twenty-seven year old worker in January.
https://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/Areas/Georgia/The-Panorama-Tbilisi-project-a-monster-in-town-186839
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