OPINION: The future of the built environment in Nairobi’s CBD isn’t uncertain

OPINION: The future of the built environment in Nairobi’s CBD isn’t uncertain

A general view shows the Central Business District in downtown Nairobi, Kenya February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya

Vocalize Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Vocalize

By David Kilui

Each October, cities around the world pause to reflect on their urban journeys through World Cities Day, the culmination of UN-Habitat’s Urban October.

This year’s theme, “People-Centered Smart Cities: Enhancing Public Spaces for All,” resonates deeply with Nairobi’s evolving identity. At the heart of this transformation is the Central Business District (CBD), a symbol of Kenya’s urban aspirations and the nerve centre of our economic, cultural, and civic life.

Yet, a fundamental question lingers; is Nairobi’s CBD on the decline?

Nairobi CBD, once a bustling epicenter of commerce and innovation, has in recent years shown signs of strain. Congestion, ground out infrastructure, unruly street vending, limited parking, and diminishing public spaces have contributed to this perception of decline. Admittedly, businesses have been gradually migrating to newer hubs like Upper Hill, Kilimani, and Westlands, seeking better connectivity, modern facilities, and security.

At the core of this challenge lies a mismatch between design and urban needs. Footpaths are narrow or obstructed, midblock crossings are unsafe, and intersections remain vehicle-dominated. Street lighting, shading, and pedestrian comfort are inconsistent, while on-street parking often competes with walkability. Street vending, though economically vital, remains poorly integrated into the city’s spatial design, resulting in conflict between order and livelihood.

But decline need not mean decay. It can also signal a moment for renewal. We still have a chance to rethink what the CBD could be and mean for the next generation of Nairobians, if we all worked together to restore its vibrancy.

The 2025 Placemaking Week Nairobi offered a blueprint for this renewal. Its transformation of Kimathi Street into a vibrant pedestrian corridor, alive with art, greenery, and cultural activity, showed that small, change-driven actions can help us reimagine the CBD's future outlook.

To refresh and restore the CBD’s vibrancy, we must anchor interventions in three key areas: rethinking urban design, encouraging public participation, and strong and effective policy decisions.

A thriving CBD depends on active mobility which includes walking, cycling, and public transport. This has to be supported by safe, well-designed streets. Footpaths must be wide, continuous, and shaded. Cycle tracks should connect seamlessly to public transport nodes, while intersections must prioritize pedestrians.

Green infrastructure, modern lighting, and accessible public toilets are not luxuries, but the real foundations of a livable city. The success of tactical urbanism interventions like those demonstrated during Placemaking Week proves that Nairobi can experiment, adapt, and scale solutions that make streets more human-centered.

Similarly, cities thrive when citizens take ownership, meaning the future of Nairobi’s CBD must be co-created by all, government, businesses, and residents. City dwellers should be visible and vocal in public forums, shaping policies on vending zones, parking, and pedestrian networks. Businesses, too, must be part of this conversation.

Public–Private Partnerships (PPPs) can drive the rehabilitation of key streets, introduce managed parking, and fund public art or urban greening initiatives. The private sector’s innovation, paired with government policy, can turn public spaces into inclusive economic ecosystems. Collaboration between real estate developers, authorities, city dwellers and civic groups can produce safe, inclusive, and economically vibrant environments.

We must advocate and exhort our leaders to prioritize livability in the city. A sustainable CBD is one that balances commerce, culture, and community. Our policy making must therefore acknowledge that the CBD is not merely a commercial zone, but the social and cultural heart of Nairobi, which needs to be developed and nurtured.

The economic implication is clear: a vibrant CBD fuels a vibrant economy. Every street redesigned for pedestrians, every building retrofitted for energy efficiency, and every public space reclaimed for culture contributes to Nairobi’s global competitiveness.

By embedding green architecture, renewable energy, efficient waste systems, and inclusive mobility into the built environment, Nairobi can enhance both B2B competitiveness and B2C vibrancy. Investing in sustainability is not just good for the planet, it is good business. Walkable, well-lit, and safe streets attract customers, tenants, and investors. Green buildings reduce operational costs. Public spaces enhance brand visibility and community trust.

The future of the built environment in Nairobi’s CBD will not be determined by chance, but by choice. Let us choose to invest in people-centered design, to bridge policy and practice, and to collaborate across sectors in reaffirming this shared responsibility. The CBD belongs to all of us.

Its renewal depends in our collective will to have the courage to reimagine Nairobi’s heart, not as a congested relic of the past, but as a model for sustainable urban living. A place where business thrives, people connect, and the city breathes again.

[The writer is the Head of Property and Facilities Management, PDM Services.]

Tags:

Nairobi CBD UN-Habitat World Cities Day

Want to send us a story? SMS to 25170 or WhatsApp 0743570000 or Submit on Citizen Digital or email wananchi@royalmedia.co.ke

Leave a Comment

Comments

No comments yet.