"It's a huge transformation in the life experience of a lot of humans. And this requires, political attention, economic attention, social attention," he said at a news conference ahead of World Habitat Day on Oct. 7.
Clos acknowledged the difficulties involved in trying to build high-density city centers and offered no easy solutions. In New York and Hong Kong, high-density comes with some of the world's highest living costs. But Clos said those are extreme examples. In Europe, he said, the average urban population density is more like 15,000 inhabitants per square kilometer. He said offering affordable housing involves difficult political decisions perhaps replacing subsidize gasoline with more subsidized housing.
Clos said high-density need not be the same as overcrowding.
"What cannot be sustained is spontaneous urbanization. When we have spontaneous urbanization instead of well-designed, high-density cities, we have overcrowding," he said. "And that is what is happening in the favelas, the slums and other places.
Thomas Elmqvist, a Stockholm University professor, said there is opportunity for planning well-designed cities. Sixty-percent of the world's land projected to become urban by 2030 has yet to be built, according to a new study titled Cities and Biodiversity Outlook, which involved more than 200 scientists.
Elmqvist, the scientific editor of the study, said 25 percent of the world's protected areas are now within 17 kilometers (11 miles) of urban areas. He said in 10 years, it will be 15 kilometers (9 miles).
Clos is the director of UN-Habitat. He spoke Friday ahead of World Habitat Day on Oct. 7.