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

18 March 2015

Neighborhood Planning for Resilient and Livable Cities, Part 2: Can ‘Nested’ Neighborhood Planning Lead to Urban Ecological Democracy?
Jayne Engle, Montreal Nik Luka, Montreal and Uppsala

Is neighborhood planning worth doing? We argued in our last blog entry (Part 1 of this series) that neighborhood planning has the potential to be transformative in improving community resilience, but that it also has a dark side. It can be divisive both spatially—by setting clear geographic ‘limits’ that signal exclusion or...

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17 March 2015

Daylighting and restoring urban streams, ponds and wetlands can provide huge ecological and social benefits. Are such restorations “worth it”? What are the pitfalls? How can we demonstrate these benefits and elevate them in the public discourse so that urban wetlands become urban planning priorities?
Adrian Benepe, New York Keith Bowers, Charleston Meredith Dobbie, Victoria Susannah Drake, New York City Herbert Dreiseitl, Überlingen Marit Larson, New York Chan-Won Lee, Changwon Kaitlin Lovell, Portland Alberto Tacón, Valdivia

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15 March 2015

Extinction of Experience: Does it Matter?
Marianne Krasny, Ithaca

Right after I graduated from Cornell, I took off for the North Cascades wilderness. First as a student and later an instructor for the National Outdoor Leadership School, I spent summers in Glacier Peak Wilderness Area, ice climbing out of crevasses, backpacking through Pacific Northwest old growth forests, and scaling ancient...

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12 March 2015

It Is Difficult to Take In the Glory of the Dandelion
David Maddox, New York

“It is difficult to take in all the glory of the Dandelion, as it is to take in a mountain, or a thunderstorm.” Charles Burchfield (1893–1967) is legendary for his watercolor landscapes, painted near his Buffalo, NY, home. His paintings are typically about nature: swamps and forests and backyards that include...

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9 March 2015

Why Do People Use Parks and Plazas in Buenos Aires?
Jonathan Craik, London Ana Faggi, Buenos Aires Sebastian Miguel, Buenos Aires Leslie Vorraber, Buenos Aires

Parks have been significant sources of open space in urban history, ranging from private, even sacred spaces to fully public spaces serving as central points of social interaction and recreation (Stanley et al. 2012). On any given day, many thousands of people spend several hours outdoors in their local park...

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5 March 2015

Apples and Tomatoes: Comparing Community Gardens and Municipally Sponsored Urban Agriculture
Mara Gittleman, Brooklyn

A review of Public Produce: Cultivating our Parks, Plazas, and Streets for Healthier Cities, by Darrin Nordahl. 2014. Island Press, Washington. ISBN: 9781610915496. 224 pages. When Darrin Nordahl first published Public Produce: the New Urban Agriculture in 2009, most urban agriculture took place in community gardens, backyard gardens, and urban farms....

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4 March 2015

Encountering the Urban Forest
Lindsay Campbell, New York

For all the critical scholarship that is written about the harnessing of volunteer labor in caring for urban trees (see, e.g., Perkins 2009), it never squared with my experience of engaging in stewardship. Following attendance at a human geography panel on ‘powerful objects’, I came to realize that my leisure...

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1 March 2015

Citizen Science in the City: Lessons from Melbourne’s BioBlitz
Chris Ives, Nottingham Yvonne Lynch, Riyadh Caragh Threlfall, Melbourne Mark Norman, Melbourne

Every day, citizen scientists contribute their time and energy to support thousands of research projects around the world (Bonney et al., 2014). They collect, categorize, and analyze data, generously volunteering their time and their personal resources in return for little other than recreational enjoyment or the personal satisfaction of helping...

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February, 2015

26 February 2015

The Secret Life of Bees: Using Big Data and Citizen Science to Unravel…What Bees Are Saying about the Environment
Jennifer Baljko, Barcelona

Once you start talking about bees, you open Pandora’s box…You’ll find small and very delicate stories behind them. Each one is interesting. — Josep Perelló, associate professor and project leader of OpenSystems UB at the Universitat de Barcelona If Josep Perelló is right about discovering the stories behind bees, Barcelona’s...

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22 February 2015

Marriage Therapy for Ecologists and Landscape Architects
Steven Handel, New Brunswick

Hello. Come in. What’s on your mind? Why have you come to chat with me? “We have such different backgrounds” Ecologists’ interest start with an exploration of the natural world, its structure and function. Architects and landscape architects start with human needs and how constructed features can answer those needs....

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19 February 2015

Illuminating New York Harbor
Rob Pirani, New York

A review of Heartbeats in the Muck: The History, Sea Life, and Environment of New York Harbor, Revised Edition, by John Waldman. 2012. Fordham University Press, New York. ISBN: 9780823249855. 160 pages. 38 black and white illustrations. New York Harbor is a murky place by nature. The mixing of fresh and salt waters,...

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18 February 2015

The Nature of Holy Cities
Naomi Tsur, Jerusalem

While it is undoubtedly true that thousands of cities around the world share a wide spectrum of common denominators, from garbage to biodiversity, from air pollution to sophisticated bike-path networks, or from unemployment to entrepreneurship (to mention only a sample few) it is perhaps important to examine common urban denominators...

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15 February 2015

The Wild Beast as the Other: Framing of Urban Wildlife in Popular Imagination
Harini Nagendra, Bangalore

India is on a rapid path to urbanisation. While currently only 30% of India’s population lives in cities, this is changing rapidly. Plans have been recently announced to build 100 new “smart cities” across India, with an ambitious plan that includes the proposed investment of 1.2 billion US dollars in...

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11 February 2015

Unintended Consequences Can Be Opportunities for Conservation
David Goode, Bath

In reviewing the wildlife habitats of British towns and cities for my recent book Nature in Towns and Cities (Harper Collins 2014) I became acutely aware that many of the UK’s most spectacular urban wetlands resulted from industrial activities. The most extensive of these are newly created lakes that formed...

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8 February 2015

Closing the Sustainability and Equity Gap: What Does it Mean to be both a Green and Just City? TNOC Podcast Episode 002
David Maddox, New York

Also available at iTunes. Story notes: Cities face many challenges with competing solutions: climate change, economic inequality, lack of access to resources and opportunities, and social and political conflict. Can we plan and design for outcomes that serve nature, provide nature-based solutions to real urban problems, and support human rights?...

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4 February 2015

The Bright Side of Indigenous Urbanization for Biodiversity 
Henrique Mercer, Montreal Viviana Figueroa, Montreal Andre Mader, Montreal Oliver Hillel, Montreal

Over time, cities originated wherever indigenous cultures agglomerated and planned links between their settlements and peri-urban ecosystems for the provision of water, food and other goods and services. Not by coincidence, these settlements often occurred in biodiversity hotspots—and we know that historically cities were hotbeds for innovation of all sorts....

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1 February 2015

Ways Forward from China’s Urban Waste Problem
Judy Li, Beijing

Urban waste management is a crucial component of our constant interaction with the environment within and around our cities. Managing waste efficiently and sustainably is a unique challenge for us all that depends on development trends, socioeconomic composition, political situation, and a host of other factors. This dependence is especially...

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January, 2015

31 January 2015

Is there such a thing as a “bird friendly city”? What does it look like? What does it not look like? Why bother?
Tim Beatley, Charlottesville Luke Engleback, Tunbridge Wells Dusty Gedge, London David Goode, Bath Madhusudan Katti, Raleigh John Marzluff, Seattle Bongani Mnisi, Cape Town Glenn Phillips, New York City KavehKen Smith, New York Yolanda van Heezik, Dunedin Maxime Zucca, Paris

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28 January 2015

“Growing Place” Revisited: After 12 Years, Children’s Activity in the School Biotope Project
Keitaro Ito, Fukutsu City

There has been a rapid decrease in the amount of open or natural space in Japan in recent years, particularly in urban areas due to the development of housing. Preserving these areas as wildlife habitats and spaces where children can play is a very important issue nowadays. I wrote about...

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26 January 2015

Common Sense Urban Tools to Change Cities, Via Curitiba
Sebastian Miguel, Buenos Aires

A review of Urban Acupuncture: Celebrating Pinpricks of Change that Enrich City Life, by Jaime Lerner. 2014. Island Press, Washington.  ISBN 13: 978-1-61091-583 / ISBN 10: 1-61091-583-6. 143 pages.  For traditional Chinese medicine, acupuncture is a method to stimulate specific points of the body to change or regulate a specific pathology and benefit the...

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