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Art, Science, Action: Green Cities Re-imagined
October, 2015

5 October 2015

Rah! Rah! for Rail: Solving Transportation in Cities
Eric Sanderson, New York

A review of Rail and the City: Shrinking Our Carbon Footprint While Reimaging Urban Space, by Roxanne Warren. 2014. ISBN: 9780262027809. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA. 336 pages. Like a dog with a bone, some of us just can’t let go of the notion of rail in cities. I’m certainly one...

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4 October 2015

Why We Need Design Guidelines for Urban Non-Humans
Paul Downton, Melbourne

Earlier this year I had the good fortune to be invited to speak at a remarkable ‘Global Conference’ in Chantilly, France. The title of the session I was to contribute to was translated into English as ‘An urbanism built on a priority for fauna and flora’. This, it seems, was...

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September, 2015

30 September 2015

September 11, 2015: An Event Ethnography of Living Memorials
Lindsay Campbell, New York Erika Svendsen, New York Heather McMillen, Honolulu Novem Auyeung, New York Rachel Holmes, New Haven Michelle Johnson, New York City Renae Reynolds, New York City

A reading of names. A procession. Placing flowers on memorials. Music. Moments of silence. Tolling of bells. Certain abiding symbols and gestures give structure to our memorial remembrances. In particular, we have come to expect a ritual formality and consistency at the World Trade Center site for remembering September 11,...

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29 September 2015

What is the insurance value of urban ecosystems and their services?
Victor Beumer, Delft Henry Booth, West Chester Mitchell Chester, Miami Thomas Elmqvist, Stockholm Alexandros Gasparatos, Tokyo Jaroslav Mysiak, Venice Rob Tinch, Brussels Henrik von Wehrden, Lüneburg Francis Vorhies, Divonne-les-Bains Koko Warner, Bonn

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28 September 2015

Stormwater Management as Both Utility and Amenity
Ben Feldmann, Los Angeles

A review of Artful Rainwater Design: Creative Ways to Manage Stormwater, by Stuart Echols and Eliza Pennypacker. 2015. ISBN 13: 978-1-61091-266-2 / ISBN 10: 1-61091-266-7. Island Press, Washington. 284 pages. Stormwater is a topic of great interest, especially now that the plight of water has been heightened by environmental pollution, dwindling...

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27 September 2015

The Nurtured Golem: A Nantes Neighborhood Transforms Environmental Bad into Good
Francois Mancebo, Paris

 At the end of my last post, Unintended Consequences: When Environmental “Goods” Turn Bad, I raised the idea that sometimes environmental “bads” can also turn good, and that it usually works better when nobody “looks”. I mean that this process works better when the inhabitants take ownership of their living...

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23 September 2015

What Pope Francis Might Do to Advance Climate Justice During His Visit to New York
Rebecca Bratspies, New York

Pope Francis visits the United States in late September 2015.  He will speak in Washington, D.C., New York, and Philadelphia, including an address at the United Nations and to a full Congress. His visit will be an opportunity for reflection and—who knows—might possibly be a turning point in the United...

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21 September 2015

Move Slow and Connect People with Nature: The Economics of Happiness in Jeonju
Patrick M. Lydon, Daejeon

A review of the International Conference on the Economics of Happiness, held on September 3-5, 2015 in Jeonju, South Korea. “We need to re-establish the link between city and land.” At the opening ceremony of the Economics of Happiness conference, we were happily greeted with this statement from the event’s...

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20 September 2015

Shrink-ing Times Square
Andrew Rudd, New York City

1. What’s the matter with Times Square?  Several years ago, Helle Søholt, CEO of Gehl Architects, said that New York would be the most sustainable city in the world if only it fixed its streets. Million Trees NYC is one effort in that direction, as is the CitiBike bike share...

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16 September 2015

Social Practice Artwork: A Restaurant and Garden Serving up Connections to Urban Nature
Patrick M. Lydon, Daejeon

Can an urban garden help us remember what it means to be human? Three months ago, we opened a slightly audacious restaurant and garden in a working-class suburb of Osaka, Japan with the intent of connecting people more deeply with food and nature in their neighborhood. Experimental and temporary in...

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14 September 2015

The Myths of Alien Species: An Alternate Perspective on “Wild”
Divya Gopal, Berlin

A review of The New Wild: Why Invasive Species Will Be Nature’s Salvation, by Fred Pearce. 2015. ISBN 978-0-8070-3368-5 / ISBN 978-0-8070-3369-2. Beacon Press, Boston. 245 pages. The New Wild is an intriguing book that looks at non-native species and nature in new light, challenging popular notions of ‘nativism,’ ‘wild’ and nature’s...

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12 September 2015

Popup Parks Reveal the Nature of Cities
Amy Hahs, Ballarat

September 18 is Park[ing] Day, a day when metered car parking spaces are transformed and reclaimed for other purposes. This annual event was first held in the USA in 2005, but has now grown to include Park[ing] Day events in cities around the world. In looking at the innovation and creativity...

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8 September 2015

What Makes a “Great” City Park? The Beholder Sees
Adrian Benepe, New York

A review of Great City Parks; Second Edition, by Alan Tate with Marcella Eaton. 2015. ISBN 978-0-415-53802-2/ ISBN 978-0-415-53805-3/ ISBN 978-1-315-75071-2. Routledge, New York. 344 pages. In this thoughtful and detailed documentation of “great” city parks, which is enlivened  by spare and insightful opinions, I am reminded of the series...

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7 September 2015

Civic Ecology Meets EdX: An Experiment in Online Social Learning and Action
Marianne Krasny, Ithaca

A pop-up garden in Kiev, volunteer “spotfixes” along sidewalks in Bangalore, and a flower garden planted atop a deadly landslide after an earthquake in Japan. These and other civic ecology practices are expanding in number. But how do we connect people across these disparate practices and places so that we...

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2 September 2015

A New Urban Paradigm: Our Way of Looking at Cities Needs to Be Turned Inside-Out
Naomi Tsur, Jerusalem

According to the old urban paradigm, cities are crime-ridden, car-infested, unhealthy and over-crowded centers of humanity. Could we conceivably cherish nature, respect others, grow our own food, earn a reasonable living, and enjoy a healthy and equitable urban environment? Reversal of the old urban paradigm is not yet a given,...

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August, 2015

30 August 2015

Biocultural Diversity and the Diverse City: A Model for Linking Nature and Culture
William Dunbar, Tokyo

The concept of biocultural diversity— the coming together of biological and cultural diversity—is receiving more attention recently along with an awareness that elements of cultures all around the world are deeply rooted in the nature, or biological diversity, around them, and that greater cultural diversity comes with greater biological diversity....

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26 August 2015

Inspiring Urban Youth for a Biodiversity-Friendly Approach to Development
Oliver Hillel, Montreal Manuela Gervasi, Montreal

The challenge of integrated approaches We all know that we are living in a deep crisis regarding the rate of our use of natural resources. We also know that addressing these problems will have inter-related and resonating effects. Such interconnection also has good aspects. Smart catalytic action can produce benefits across many levels—science...

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24 August 2015

Risk: How Can We Put the UN, Governments, and the Public on the Same Page?
Fadi Hamdan, Athens

Urban populations—and the associated concentration of livelihoods and assets in cities—continue to increase worldwide, thereby increasing exposure to hazards. Coupled with aging infrastructure and housing stock, this trend leads to an increase in vulnerability. And this vulnerability is compounded by climate-change driven storms, sea-level rise, and associated flooding and landslides....

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19 August 2015

Getting Our Nature On: Take a Train and Start Walking
Jennifer Baljko, Barcelona

How to bring together nature, fitness, and public transportation. A few weeks ago, my partner, Lluís, and I wanted to go for a two-day trek, to test some camping gear, to sleep outdoors, and to listen to birds while walking under the shade of pine trees. But we didn’t want...

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16 August 2015

London: A National Park City
David Goode, Bath

Something very significant is happening in London. It’s a plan to make London the world’s first National Park City. Now that’s an idea that could catch on in a very big way. Over the past 18 months, a movement has been growing, drawing together Londoners who want to apply National...

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