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sustainable cities
and communities

Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable

Home / Sustainable Development Goals / 2024 – SDG 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities

Overview

Caraga State University (CSU) affirms its commitment to Sustainable Development Goal 11 (SDG 11): Sustainable Cities and Communities by promoting campus environments that are inclusive, safe, resilient, and sustainable. CSU integrates sustainability into its campus development planning, infrastructure modernization efforts, research initiatives, and community extension engagements. Through its Comprehensive Land Use Development and Infrastructure Plan (LUDIP), the University provides a clear strategic framework for spatial development, mobility access, public space enhancement, and climate resiliency.

CSU prioritizes walkabilitygreen open spacesinclusive access to academic and service facilities, and housing support for students, especially those coming from remote areas across Caraga Region. The University collaborates with local and regional government units, sectoral organizations, and other academic institutions to advance sustainable land-use practices, participatory governance, and disaster-resilient infrastructure development.

This report demonstrates CSU’s ongoing progress across all major SDG 11 indicator categories: sustainable research, community partnerships, accessible infrastructure, mobility and transport planning, campus land-use management, and sustainable facility development. The University remains committed to strengthening data-driven planning and community-centered development, while continually enhancing environmental stewardship and urban resilience.

1. Introduction

Sustainable Development Goal 11 encourages the development of human settlements that are socially inclusive, environmentally resilient, accessible, and well-planned. Higher education institutions have a central role in modeling sustainable campus urbanism, developing research that informs local government planning, and supporting community capacity-building for resilient development.

Caraga State University’s sustainability efforts are guided by three policy anchors:

  1. United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 11) – Ensuring access to safe, inclusive, and sustainable human settlements.
  2. Philippine Development Plan (PDP 2023–2028) – Strengthening livable communities, resilient infrastructure, and sustainable land-use governance.
  3. CHED Memorandum Order No. 1, s. 2022 – Integration of sustainability into higher education governance, planning, curriculum, and community extension.

CSU operationalizes these policy commitments through sustainable campus planning, environmentally responsive facility design, climate risk-sensitive development, and participatory engagement with community and government stakeholders across Caraga Region.

1.1 Institutional Commitment to SDG 11

CSU’s Comprehensive Land Use Development and Infrastructure Plan (LUDIP) outlines a systematic roadmap for campus development covering:

  • Land-use zoning and building distribution
  • Green and open space conservation
  • Pedestrian-priority circulation networks
  • Risk- and climate-resilient site planning
  • Housing and learning facility expansion
  • Phased development strategies across main and satellite campuses

The LUDIP ensures that campus expansion is aligned with sustainable growth principles, supports academic excellence, and improves quality of campus life.

11. 1 – Research on Sustainable Cities and Communities

11.1.1 – Research Supporting Sustainable Cities and Communities

Indicator Description

This indicator examines CSU’s research contributions to sustainable urban development, environmental management, inclusive community planning, climate adaptation, and related areas aligned with SDG 11. Research outputs include faculty-led projects, student theses, institutional research programs, externally funded research, and collaborative studies with government and private partners.

Narrative

Caraga State University integrates sustainability themes into its institutional research framework through its research centers and academic units. Research initiatives support evidence-based planningenvironmental governanceurban mobility designresettlement and housing planning, and climate-resilient development across Caraga Region.

Research findings are applied through:

  • Technical support to LGUs and regional agencies
  • Land-use and hazard mapping assistance
  • Community-based resilience training
  • Policy development collaborations

These engagements demonstrate CSU’s role as both a knowledge generator and development partner in sustainable regional growth.

Representative Research Outputs Aligned with SDG 11

Title of Study / Publication

Author(s)

Year

Key Theme

Relevance to SDG 11

Sustainable Land-Use Assessment for Urban Expansion in Northern Mindanao

CSU Faculty Research Team

2023

GIS & Urban Planning

Supports evidence-based spatial development planning

Community-Based Waste Management Strategies in Barangay Settlements

Extension and Research Faculty

2022

Community Governance & Waste Reduction

Strengthens sustainable community-level environmental systems

Assessing Pedestrian Prioritization in CSU Core Campus

Campus Planning Research Group

2024

Mobility & Walkability

Informs pedestrian-first campus design under Indicator 11.4.6

Climate Adaptation and Risk Management for Coastal Communities in Caraga

Applied Science Researchers

2021

Climate Resilience & DRRM

Supports risk-informed planning for vulnerable settlements

Sustainable Housing Design for Local Government Resettlement Sites

Engineering & Architecture Faculty

2022

Low-Cost Housing & Urban Inclusion

Enhances access to safe and affordable shelter solutions

Note: Evidence files will be listed and referenced in the Annex and References section.

Challenges and Recommendations

  • Increase publication indexing and dissemination of applied sustainability research.
  • Broaden interdisciplinary research collaboration across colleges and external agencies.
  • Expand use of research evidence in regional planning decision-making.
11.1.2 – Community Engagement and Partnerships Supporting Sustainable Cities and Communities

Indicator Description

This indicator evaluates how CSU partners with communities, LGUs, agencies, and civil society to support sustainable settlements through training, technical assistance, community organizing, and development planning.

Narrative

CSU’s extension programs are community-centered and responsive to regional development needs. The University works closely with barangays, municipal planning offices, local DRRM councils, and regional government agencies to strengthen environmental governance, resilience planning, and sustainable settlement management.

Programs are guided by:

  • Community-based participatory development approaches
  • Interdisciplinary faculty extension engagement
  • Needs assessments conducted with local stakeholders

These initiatives demonstrate CSU’s commitment to translating academic knowledge into practical, community-benefiting solutions.

Representative Community Partnerships Related to SDG 11

Program / Initiative

Partner Community / Agency

Year(s)

Focus Area

Support Provided

Barangay-Level Solid Waste Management Capacity Building

Barangays in Butuan and Agusan Areas

2022–2024

Waste Reduction & Governance

Training, IEC materials, planning support

GIS-Based Land Use and Zoning Support Program

Provincial and City Planning Offices

2023

Urban Planning & GIS

Technical mapping assistance and planning workshops

Community DRRM and Climate Adaptation Seminar Series

LGUs & DRRM Offices across Caraga

2021–2024

Resilience & Hazard Preparedness

Hazard mapping, drills, risk awareness training

Sustainable Housing and Community Layout Design Project

Selected Caraga LGUs

2022

Housing & Socialized Settlement

Technical review and architectural planning input

Pedestrian Safety and Walkability Advocacy Campaign

CSU Campus Community & Adjacent Barangays

2023–2024

Urban Safety & Low-Carbon Mobility

Guidelines, signage planning, pedestrian consultations

Challenges and Recommendations

  • Strengthen long-term partnership frameworks for sustained community benefit.
  • Establish a centralized extension data and outcomes monitoring system.
  • Increase student involvement in community-based sustainability projects.

11.2 — Accessibility, Mobility, and Sustainable Transportation

11.2.1 – Accessibility of Campus Facilities

Indicator Description

This indicator measures the extent to which CSU ensures equitable access to campus spaces and services, particularly for persons with disabilities (PWDs), senior citizens, and individuals with mobility limitations.

Narrative

Caraga State University adopts an inclusive infrastructure development policy aligned with:

  • The Philippine Accessibility Law (BP 344)
  • The National Building Code
  • CHED Standards for Campus Infrastructure Development

Campus upgrades are planned and implemented through the LUDIP to promote safe, barrier-free movement. These improvements support universal access to academic, administrative, residential, and recreational facilities.

Accessibility Features Implemented

Building / Facility

Accessibility Features

Compliance Reference

Year Updated

Main Library and Learning Commons

Entry ramp, elevator, PWD comfort room, tactile flooring

BP 344 / LUDIP

2023

Academic Building Complex

Elevator access, wide corridors, ramp systems

National Building Code

2022–2024

Administration Building

Wheelchair ramp & signage

BP 344

2021

Student Services Center

Step-free entrance, accessible counters

CHED Infrastructure Guidelines

2023

Core Campus Walkways

Non-slip paving, gentle slope gradients, handrails

CSU LUDIP Mobility Plan

Ongoing

Challenges and Recommendations

  • Continue accessibility retrofitting of older structures.
  • Expand tactile and auditory navigation systems for visually impaired students.
  • Institutionalize accessibility compliance audits every two years.
 
11.2.2 – Sustainable Transportation Planning

Indicator Description

This indicator evaluates CSU’s planning for low-carbon mobility, reduced vehicle reliance, and safe campus movement.

Narrative

CSU’s LUDIP integrates mobility planning that supports:

  • Reduced internal campus vehicular traffic

  • Clear pedestrian-first circulation priority

  • Encouragement of walking and non-motorized mobility modes

  • Safe interface with public transportation systems outside campus

The campus remains accessible to public jeepney and tricycle routes, allowing students and staff to commute affordably and sustainably.

11.2.3 – Walkability and Pedestrian Safety

Narrative

The University prioritizes walkability as a primary movement system, which supports safety, physical wellness, social interaction, and carbon-reduction goals.

Improvements include:

  • Shaded walkway corridors

  • Assigned pedestrian-only zones in academic centers

  • Safe crossing points and directional signage

  • Lighting enhancements for evening safety

Pedestrian Improvements

Location

Enhancement

Status

Year

Academic Belt Walkway

Shaded pedestrian corridor

Completed

2023

Library-to-Student Center Path

Gradual slope paving and accessibility railings

Completed

2022

Western Campus Green Walk Spine

Green-buffer walkway system

Ongoing

2024

11.2.4 – Connectivity to Local Transportation Systems

Narrative

CSU maintains coordinated access routes linking the campus with local city transport systems. Partnerships with local transport groups and LGUs ensure regulated, safe, and affordable access for students and staff.

Measures include:

  • Defined loading and unloading areas

  • Campus boundary traffic flow controls

  • Crossing safety signage

  • Coordination with barangay and city traffic offices

Challenges and Recommendations

  • Establish shuttle transport options for students from remote barangays.

  • Expand shaded waiting areas at campus transport nodes.

11.3 — Land Use Planning and Participatory Development

11.3.1 – Sustainable Land Use Planning and Campus Development Strategy

Indicator Description

This indicator evaluates how CSU plans and manages campus development to ensure sustainable, climate-resilient, and inclusive use of space.

Narrative

Caraga State University implements a long-term and data-informed campus spatial development strategy through its Comprehensive Land Use Development and Infrastructure Plan (LUDIP). The LUDIP provides a detailed framework for:

  • Zoning and spatial allocation of academic, residential, administrative, and recreational spaces

  • Preservation and enhancement of green and open spaces

  • Pedestrian-first mobility corridors and reduced car-dependent layout

  • Hazard-sensitive site planning, guided by geospatial and DRRM assessments

  • Phased development across both main and satellite campuses

The plan aligns with:

  • United Nations SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities)

  • Philippine Development Plan (2023–2028) goals on sustainable and resilient settlements

  • CHED CMO No. 1, s. 2022 requiring higher education institutions to integrate sustainability into infrastructure and land-use planning

This institutional planning ensures that CSU grows sustainably, safely, and strategically, while supporting learning, research, housing, and community functions.

Planning Component

Purpose / Sustainability Function

Evidence Source

Campus Zoning and Building Distribution Plan

Prevents congestion and ensures functional clustering

LUDIP Masterplan Sheets

Green and Open Space Network

Supports ecological balance and student wellness

Campus Landscaping Plan

Pedestrian and Mobility Circulation Plan

Promotes walkability and a low-carbon campus

LUDIP Mobility and Access Section

Hazard and Risk Overlay Map

Guides development away from flood or hazard-prone zones

DRRM Hazard Mapping Reports

Multi-Campus Development Phasing

Ensures long-term scalable growth

LUDIP Development Phasing Section

Challenges and Recommendations

  • Expand continuous green corridors connecting campus zones.
  • Strengthen monitoring and updating mechanisms for LUDIP implementation.
  • Increase integration of community feedback in development planning.
11.3.2 – Community Participation in Planning and Development

Indicator Description

This indicator evaluates how CSU engages stakeholders such as LGUs, community leaders, planners, faculty, and students in campus and local development planning efforts.

Narrative

CSU applies a participatory governance model in campus planning and community development. Stakeholders are engaged through consultations, planning workshops, public forums, and development reviews. These engagements ensure that physical development respects both institutional priorities and community needs.

Stakeholder participation enables:

  • Inclusive discussion of land-use and circulation improvements

  • Coordination with city and barangay development plans

  • Joint climate resilience planning

  • Integration of campus design with community accessibility

Representative Participation Activities

Stakeholder Group

Activity Conducted

Year(s)

Purpose

LGU Planning and Development Office

Campus planning coordination workshop

2022–2023

Align CSU development with city zoning and mobility plans

Barangay Local Government Units

Consultations on boundary zones and pedestrian movement

2023

Ensure safe public access and community integration

CSU Student Organizations

Campus walkability and safety feedback sessions

2022–2024

Incorporate student experience into mobility design

Regional DRRM & ENRO Offices

Hazard risk assessment workshops

2021–2024

Integrate climate risk overlays into development decisions

Challenges and Recommendations

  • Strengthen documentation and monitoring of participatory planning outputs.
  • Expand student and community representation in planning consultations.
  • Institutionalize a Campus Planning Advisory Committee for continuing stakeholder collaboration.

 

11.4 — Infrastructure, Housing, Public Spaces, and Pedestrian Priority

11.4.1 – Provision of Safe and Affordable Student Housing

Indicator Description

This indicator assesses the availability and quality of safe, secure, and affordable housing for students, especially those coming from geographically remote or economically disadvantaged backgrounds.

Narrative

Caraga State University recognizes that access to suitable and secure housing contributes directly to student success and well-being. The University provides on-campus dormitories as affordable residential options to support students who require proximity to academic and support services. Housing development is integrated within the CSU LUDIP, ensuring that new and existing residential facilities align with campus zoning, mobility planning, and climate-resilient building standards.

Ongoing renovation and expansion projects have strengthened:

  • Security systems (controlled access, monitoring, lighting)

  • Ventilation and natural lighting enhancements

  • Gender-sensitive residential allocations

  • Accessible pathways and entry points

  • Study lounges and shared social areas for community-building

Representative Student Housing Facilities

Facility

Capacity / Use

Key Features

Status

CSU Ladies’ Dormitory

Female residents

Study rooms, shared kitchen, 24/7 security

Operational

CSU Gentlemen’s Dormitory

Male residents

Common lounge, multi-room layouts, security access

Operational / undergoing gradual improvement works

Proposed Student Housing Expansion (LUDIP Phase 2)

Planned increase in residential capacity

Integrated into campus green and mobility corridors

In development

Figure Placeholders (Insert Images Directly Under Section in Final Docx)

Figure 1. CSU Ladies’ Dormitory Exterior.
Figure 2. CSU Gentlemen’s Dormitory Main Entrance.

Challenges and Recommendations

  • Increase bed capacity to meet growing enrolment.

  • Expand access to shared study and wellness spaces.

  • Continue phased renovation for uniform accessibility standards.

11.4.2 – Upgrading and Maintenance of Campus Facilities

Indicator Description

This indicator evaluates CSU’s commitment to continuous facility improvement to ensure safe, inclusive, and learning-conducive environments.

Narrative

CSU conducts sustainability-oriented facility upgrades, prioritizing:

  • Accessibility retrofitting for PWD users
  • Safety enhancements (lighting, handrails, open pathways)
  • Ventilation and structural improvements in high-use areas
  • Restroom modernization aligned with gender and accessibility considerations

These improvements ensure that the campus environment remains functional, inclusive, and adaptive to student and academic needs.

Challenges and Recommendations

  • Implement scheduled building audit cycles.
  • Increase green building requirements for future construction bids.
  • Allocate multi-year budget lines for proactive maintenance.
11.4.3 – Provision of Public and Community Use Open Spaces

Narrative

CSU maintains open green spaces integrated into the academic core, student life areas, and campus pedestrian networks. These public spaces support:

  • Outdoor learning and group work
  • Recreation and wellness activities
  • Social interaction and community-building

The University continues to enhance green corridors linking academic buildings, enabling walkable and environmentally restorative campus experiences.

11.4.4 – Facilities Supporting Community Interaction and Well-Being

The University provides student centers, lounges, shaded outdoor seating areas, and multipurpose assembly spacesthat support student wellness and social engagement. These areas contribute to a vibrant, inclusive, and supportive campus culture.

11.4.5 – Development of Facilities Supporting Inclusive Campus Life

Inclusive campus development ensures:

  • Gender-responsive restrooms
  • Accessible water and sanitation points
  • Prayer and meditation rooms
  • Health and counseling services

These facilities strengthen the social and emotional well-being dimensions of campus sustainability.

11.4.6 – Pedestrian Priority and Walkable Campus Design

Indicator Description

This indicator measures prioritization of safe, accessible, pedestrian-oriented circulation in campus planning and development.

Narrative

CSU promotes a pedestrian-first campus environment, reducing vehicular congestion and prioritizing safe, shaded walkways that connect key learning, housing, and service facilities.

Infrastructure enhancements include:

  • Dedicated pedestrian corridors
  • Shaded walkway networks
  • Non-slip paving and ADA-compliant pathway gradients
  • Controlled access to vehicular zones in the academic core
  • Lighting and safety visibility improvements

Walkability Enhancements

Campus Location

Walkway or Corridor Enhancement

Status

Year

Academic Core Spine

Shaded pedestrian-only walkway

Completed

2023

Library–Student Center Link

Slope regrading + handrails

Completed

2022

Western Green Spine

Tree-buffer walkway system

Ongoing

2024

Figure Placeholders (Insert images directly below in Word)

Figure 3. Shaded pedestrian corridor along academic buildings.
Figure 4. Walkway safety railings and non-slip paving.
Figure 5. Landscape walkway buffer zones.

Challenges and Recommendations

  • Expand walkway shading across southern zones.
  • Develop bicycle lane feasibility integration.
  • Continue replacing paved surfaces with permeable materials.

Conclusion and Strategic Recommendations

Conclusion

Caraga State University demonstrates strong and sustained commitment to Sustainable Development Goal 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities through strategic campus planning, inclusive infrastructure development, sustainability-oriented research, and community-engaged extension programs. The University’s Comprehensive Land Use Development and Infrastructure Plan (LUDIP) provides a clear and future-focused framework for guiding campus growth, integrating climate resilience, enhancing accessibility, and promoting livable learning environments.

Institutional investments in walkability, public spaces, student housing, environmental governance, and community partnership programs reflect CSU’s recognition that sustainable cities and communities are shaped both by physical development and by participatory, inclusive decision-making. CSU continues to position itself not only as an educational institution, but also as a regional partner in cultivating equitable, resilient, and sustainable human settlements.

Ongoing and planned efforts show that CSU is progressing toward becoming a model sustainable university campus in Mindanao — one that balances academic advancement with community responsibility, urban systems thinking, and environmental stewardship.

Strategic Recommendations

To strengthen long-term alignment with SDG 11 and enhance CSU’s performance in national and international sustainability assessments (including THE Impact Rankings), the following recommendations are proposed:

1. Strengthen Monitoring and Evaluation Systems

Develop standardized monitoring frameworks to track:

  • Indicator performance metrics

  • Campus infrastructure accessibility compliance

  • Walkability and mobility improvements

  • Community engagement outcomes

2. Increase Opportunities for Sustainable Campus Living

  • Expand student housing capacity, prioritizing affordability and accessibility.

  • Enhance shared study and wellness facilities in dormitories.

3. Expand Green and Open Spaces

  • Increase shaded pedestrian corridors and tree-buffer walkways.

  • Convert select paved spaces into permeable green zones.

4. Enhance Integration of Sustainability in Academic Programs

  • Strengthen curriculum modules on sustainable urbanism, climate resilience, and community planning.

  • Encourage interdisciplinary and student-led sustainability research.

5. Institutionalize Participatory Development Mechanisms

  • Establish a Campus Planning Advisory Committee with student, faculty, staff, and community representation.

  • Conduct annual campus mobility and accessibility engagement forums.

6. Strengthen Regional and Local Government Partnerships

  • Increase collaborative work with LGUs on land-use planning, disaster risk reduction, and sustainable settlement development.

  • Expand technical services and research-based advisory support.

By continuing to build upon these strategic priorities, CSU can further embed sustainability into its governance culture, pedagogical innovation, campus development, and community engagement — shaping future-proof, inclusive, and resilient learning environments for the region.