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Art, Science, Action: Green Cities Re-imagined
September, 2016

6 September 2016

Using Green Infrastructure to Tackle New Orleans’ Water Management Woes
Josh Lewis, New Orleans

Several months ago, the City of New Orleans was awarded $141 million dollars from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (or HUD) to implement a wide-ranging green infrastructure project in the city’s Gentilly neighborhood. The main goal of this project, known as the “Gentilly Resilience District,” is fairly...

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4 September 2016

The Rivers Have Called Upon Us
Niki Singleton, New York City

As I was reading Musagetes’ Manifesto on Economic Dignity and getting all passionate about activism, the usual disturbing and stressful noise from the construction of a new ferry pier next to the construction site of another huge tower on the East River in New York City started up. The new...

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1 September 2016

Torpor and Awakening
Vanessa de Oliveira Andreotti, Vancouver

I am from a family with Indigenous Latin American and German ancestry. I have been to many different countries and lived in different places. I believe this is partly because the Indigenous tradition my family comes from is nomadic. They see the earth as a living entity, and if they...

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August, 2016

29 August 2016

Timely Tales of Urban Nature
Gavin Van Horn, Chicago

A review of City Wilds: Essays and Stories about Urban Nature by Terrell F. Dixon. 2002. The University of Georgia Press. ISBN: 978-0820323398. 336 pages. Buy the book. Writing this review came with a built-in challenge: Is an anthology, now almost 15 years old, worth a reader’s time and money? I...

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28 August 2016

Formes pour vivre: An Experiment in Ecological-Environmental-Scientific Poetics
Karen Houle, Guelph

In this short essay my aim is modest and two-fold. First, I would like to share with you a story about an experiment in ecological-environmental-scientific-poetics that worked out beautifully. It worked so well that I believe it is worth sharing. Second, in the spirit of sharing, so that others can try...

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25 August 2016

ONE LANDSCAPE: A MINI Treatise on the Suburban MEGA City and Tactics to Design Within It
Kevin Sloan, Dallas-Fort Worth

Different schools of professional and academic thought have recently emerged to address the unprecedented problems of the sprawling megacity. One particular group believes that solutions will emerge from the cultivation of data and vast amounts of statistical research. This activity, which is sometimes referred to a “datascaping”, reduces the complex...

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21 August 2016

Farmers, Chefs, and Lawyers: Building an Ecology of One
Patrick M. Lydon, Daejeon

We live in an ecology of separation. Our human-built ecology is today so far separated from the earth’s ecology that it is impossible for sustainability—let alone environmental and social well-being—to be achieved within it. This is where we are as a society, but we don’t have to be stuck here....

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17 August 2016

Chicks in the City
Valerie Gwinner, Nairobi

Urban livestock has long been viewed as dirty, unsafe, and decidedly un-modern by both policymakers and members of the general public. Yet, for many people living in and near the cities of developing countries, animals are a key source of food, nutrition, and livelihood. In Kenya, peri-urban chicken production has...

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15 August 2016

Better Places Add Up to Better Cities
Traci Sooter, Springfield

A review of Good Urbanism: Six Steps to Creating Prosperous Places by Nan Ellin. 2012.  Island Press. ISBN 13: 978-1-61091-374-4. 141 pages. Buy the book. Many people have a desire to improve spaces in their cities and neighborhoods, but most don’t know where to begin or what steps to take to see a community...

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14 August 2016

What are the unifying elements of an urban ecology of the Global South and geographic south? Are they different than those in the north?
Pippin Anderson, Cape Town Olga Barbosa, Valdivia Timothy Bonebrake, Hong Kong Bharat Dahiya, Bangkok Ana Faggi, Buenos Aires Sabina Caula, Ibarra, Ecuador Shuaib Lwasa, Kampala Fadi Hamdan, Athens Yvonne Lynch, Riyadh Colin Meurk, Christchurch Sue Parnell, Cape Town Steward Pickett, Poughkeepsie Luis Sandoval, San José Seth Schindler, Sheffield Tan Puay Yok, Singapore

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14 August 2016

Citizen Science Facilitates Both Science and Engagement
Laura Booth, San Francisco

When I pulled up in my friend’s truck to the tunnel entrance to the Marin Headlands, part of San Francisco’s Golden Gate National Recreation Area, I entered what appeared to be a fine mist of white plant fluff. I turned off the motor and observed. Incidentally, the white plant fluff had...

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10 August 2016

Some Birds Love Cities—Can Cities Love them Back? TNOC Podcast Episode 9
Philip Silva, New York David Maddox, New York

Also available at iTunes. Story Notes:  House sparrows, rock pigeons, and red-tailed hawks are three bird species that have successfully—and very visibly—adapted to life in cities. Yet as the number and the size of cities across the globe continues to grow, more birds find themselves dealing with the challenges and the...

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7 August 2016

Elephants in the City
Lynn Wilson, Vancouver

I recently spent a month in Chiang Mai, Thailand, and have been reflecting on my experience ever since. Chiang Mai is a beautiful and vibrant city, rich in culture and history. The Buddhist religion permeates every aspect of the city and surrounding countryside, with temples and symbols of Buddhism everywhere....

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3 August 2016

Water as a Commons in Detroit, the Great Lakes, and Beyond
Rebecca Salminen Witt, Detroit

For a state surrounded by fresh water, Michigan, in the northern United States, certainly has had its share of water woes lately. Michigan’s water has always been our crowning glory; from our geography to our automobile license plates, the Great Lakes define us. As we hit the height of summer,...

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1 August 2016

Lessons from Beasts, Birds, and Other Inhabitants of the Urban Jungle
Chris Hensley, Fresno

A review of The Urban Bestiary: Encountering the Everyday Wild by Lyanda Lynn Haupt. 2013. ISBN: 978-0316178525. Little, Brown and Company. 338 pages. Buy the book. Bestiaries—elaborate and fantastical combinations of medieval scientific knowledge and folklore—were meant to describe the animal life of the Earth. These large volumes depict all...

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July, 2016

31 July 2016

The Aburrá Valley Must Finally Understand: Water is Also Nature!
Gloria Aponte, Medellín

Understanding the nature of the place in which a city exists must be a priority, and involves sensible use of the local context, building in a manner consistent with the particularities of topography—an imperative highlighted in the Colombian Andes—and appropriate integration with hydrology and water flow systems, biodiversity, and other...

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27 July 2016

Skin the City
Paula Segal, Brooklyn Daniel Eizirik, Porto Allegre

The skin of the city shifts. Waves of residents come and go; meanings vanish. The longer I live here, the more I feel like I am a creature of many phantom limbs. Hungry, I walk to Jimmy’s hoping for fish and a chair to eat it in, but it is...

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24 July 2016

What Do Rotterdammers Want in Green Infrastructure? We Asked Them
Marthe Derkzen, Arnhem/Nijmegen

Now that urban greening is increasingly seen as a climate adaptation strategy, the question is how to best provide the necessary green space. Where, at which scale, and what type of greenery? Which design is preferred? And how can municipalities increase public support for green adaptation measures? To find answers...

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20 July 2016

The Life Outside Gated Communities
Ragene Palma, London

It’s a sunny morning and I leave the house, walking towards the gate of our subdivision. It’s just a few meters, downhill, around that pechay plantation, then uphill, typical of the sloping contour of Marikina Valley. In the two minutes and few meters, I see almost no one. Perhaps just...

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18 July 2016

The High Line. Foreseen. Unforeseen.
Adrian Benepe, New York

A review of The High Line. By James Corner Field Operations and Diller Scofido + Renfro. 2015. ISBN: 9780714871004. Phaidon Press. 452 pages. Buy the book. New York City’s High Line Park, once a rusting relic of abandoned freight rail transportation infrastructure, has become arguably one of the world’s best-known...

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