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

10 May 2015

Birds are for Girls? What Children’s Media Teaches Kids about Nature and Cities
Laura Shillington, Montreal

In his essay published on The Nature of Cities in 2013, Keitaro Ito asked what seems at first to be a simple question: “Where will children learn about nature?” Yet it is actually an incredibly complex question, caught up in adult ideas that romanticize both childhood and nature. Children’s understanding...

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5 May 2015

There’s a Social Element to the Nature in Cities
Adrian Benepe, New York

Thanks to a bunch of canny coyotes doing what coyotes do, we have recently been reminded of the increasing presence of nature in cities and the human interaction with nature, both in New York City and other cities. And these lessons are applicable not just to the many cities where...

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2 May 2015

A World without Cars, as Imagined by Eric Sanderson
Paul White, New York City

A review of Terra Nova: The New World After Oil, Cars and Suburbs, by Eric W. Sanderson. 2013. ISBN 978-1-4197-0434-5. Abrams Books, New York. 351 pages. “…and thus we layered a continent with asphalt and linoleum.”—Eric Sanderson (Terra Nova) In 2010, Brooklyn’s Prospect Park West was transformed with a protected bike lane...

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April, 2015

29 April 2015

Nature in View, Nature in Design: Reconnecting People with Nature through Design
Whitney Hopkins, London

“The more we know of other forms of life, the more we enjoy and respect ourselves…Humanity is exalted not because we are so far above other living creatures, but because knowing them well elevates the very concept of life.” — E.O. Wilson A recent, satirical New Yorker piece by Andy...

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26 April 2015

In the Future, Will We Build Cities for Wildlife and Design the Countryside for People?
Amy Hahs, Ballarat

Cities have long been known as hotspots for innovation. In the past, much of this could be attributed to cities being the centralised physical location of businesses, investors, consumers, markets, and places of learning, and as nodes for connecting with other people and cities around the world. Yet in the...

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21 April 2015

A Spatial Overview of the Nature of Cities
Andre Mader, Montreal

I like to simplify what constitutes urban nature in a given area. I therefore thought it might be interesting to provide an overview and to ask whether anything is missing, or erroneously included. This article expresses my view of the variety of forms that could be included under the “nature...

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21 April 2015

Imaging the urban wild: Fourteen photographers and artists show and talk about their work
Joshua Burch, London Emilio Fantin, Milan Mike Feller, New York City Andrés Flajszer, Barcelona Mike Houck, Portland Chris Jordan, Seattle Robin Lasser, Oakland Monika Lawrence, Bemidji Patrick M. Lydon, Daejeon David Maddox, New York Chris Payne, New York City Eric Sanderson, New York Jonathan Stenvall, Stockholm Benjamin Swett, New York City

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16 April 2015

A Tree Hitched to the Universe
Russell Galt, Edinburgh

A wee garden in a windy city From a leafy suburb in the shadow of Table Mountain, I need not venture far to encounter a myriad of remarkable creatures employing clever survival strategies. Fighting, stalking, feigning, loving, dancing, stealing, and darting, biodiversity spills into and out of my garden. It...

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16 April 2015

Artists, Vagabonds, and an Accidental Nature Reserve in San Francisco Bay
Patrick M. Lydon, Daejeon

A review of Refuge in Refuse: Homesteading Art and Culture, an exhibition curated by Robin Lasser, Danielle Siembieda, and Barbara Boissevain at SOMArts, San Francisco, USA.  For such a far-reaching social and ecological exposition, Refuge in Refuse: Homesteading Art and Culture centers on a surprisingly small piece of man-made land...

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15 April 2015

What Is Civic Ecology? 25 Definitions. TNOC Podcast Episode 004
David Maddox, New York

Also available at iTunes. Story notes: Marianne Krasny and Keith Tidball of Cornell’s Civic Ecology Lab convened a workshop in Annapolis Maryland, at the offices of The National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center, or SESYNC. (I [David Maddox] facilitated.) The workshop was a gathering of 25 scholars and practitioners, come to talk about civic...

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12 April 2015

A Tech Touch: Connecting Beaches, Parks, and Big Data
Jennifer Baljko, Barcelona

Smart city technology is going beyond data-collecting sensors in streetlights and on garbage containers. It’s expanding to beaches and parks, creating a feedback loop that will allow local Barcelona Metropolitan Area officials to better manage public spaces. This technology adds a layer of big-data information that, ideally, will help cities...

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9 April 2015

What are “Garden Cities” Without a Garden Culture? How a Cultural Connection with Nature Can Build a Truly Sustainable Future
Patrick M. Lydon, Daejeon

This marks the fourth year that my partner Suhee Kang and I have been studying, working with, living with, and learning from individuals in East Asia and the U.S. who are at the forefront of the sustainable (agri)culture movement. During this time, our primary goal has been the making of...

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5 April 2015

Chinese Urban Green Areas: Classic Gardens to a Globalized Landscape
Maria E Ignatieva, Perth Na Xiu, Uppsala & Xi’an Fengping Yang, Uppsala

In October 2014, we had a great opportunity to explore different green areas of several Chinese cities within the project “Sustainable green infrastructure in urban-rural areas of China based on eco-civilization,” which was sponsored by the Chinese Government. It was particularly interesting to see different types of greenery that reflects...

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2 April 2015

Complex and Useful, Green Is Infrastructure
Ana Faggi, Buenos Aires

A review of Green Infrastructure: A Landscape Approach, by David C. Rouse and Ignacio F. Bunster-Ossa. 2013.  ISBN: 978-1-611900-62-0. Report Number 571. Planning Advisory Service. American Planning Association. 157 pages. Available here.  This PAS Report, in line with the current principles of sustainability, discusses green infrastructure (GI) as the visible...

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1 April 2015

Signals and Snapshots from Semaphore: Musings on Design Guidelines for Urban Fractals
Paul Downton, Melbourne

The fractal idea revisited in an attempt to make the concept clearer on a day-to-day, more visceral basis. In my first blog for TNOC I outlined my concept of an ‘urban fractal’ and noted my fascination with the idea that “one might be able to identify patterns in urban systems...

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March, 2015

30 March 2015

Where Can Civic Ecology Lead? TNOC Podcast Episode 003
David Maddox, New York

Also available at iTunes. Story notes: A conversation about civic ecology between Lance Gunderson, a landscape ecologist from Emory University in Atlanta; Caroline Lewis, of Climate Leadership Engagement Opportunities, or CLEO, in Miami; and Arjen Wals, a professor of social learning and sustainable development at Wageningen University, The Netherlands. Climate change and other stresses...

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29 March 2015

Green Transport Routes Are Social-Cultural-Ecological Corridors
Janice Astbury, Buenos Aires

Since moving from Edinburgh to London, I have greatly missed my bicycle commute along the former’s Union Canal. There are similar routes in London, but they’re unfortunately not on my way to work. I have always sought out such corridors and they have sometimes influenced my destinations. In response to...

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26 March 2015

Unintended Consequences: When Environmental “Goods” Turn Bad
Francois Mancebo, Paris

After a hectic start to 2015, I finally managed to slow down the pace. A few days ago, I attempted to catch up on some overdue readings—my way to keep in the loop. Among the many documents piling up on my computer desktop was this short podcast from TNOC: “Closing...

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22 March 2015

Lessons on Post-Resilience from Venice, 2015
Franco Montalto, Philadelphia and Venice

“Stronger than the storm.” I can’t get this phrase out of my head, nearly one week into my sabbatical move to Venice, Italy. It so happens that we arrived on a week when the moon and the winds lined up to create acqua alta (high water) for six days in...

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19 March 2015

Lessons from Britain’s Urban Nature Movement
Mike Houck, Portland

A review of Nature in Towns and Cities, by David Goode. 2014. William Collins, New Naturalist Library. ISBN: 9780007242405. ISBN 10: 0007242409. 417 pages. The newest title in The New Naturalist Library, Nature in Towns and Cities by Dr. David Goode, is true to the series’ dual goals of “recapturing...

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