quinta-feira, 3 de setembro de 2015

PARQUES - Pequenas áreas verdes são importantes, mas cidades precisam de grandes parques


(AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)


Parklets Are Great, But Big Parks Pack a Big Punch

By Cassie Owens | September 1, 2015

Is there a right way to green a city? Yes, University of Exeter researchers say, planning high-density neighborhoods with grand parks, as opposed to low-density neighborhoods with ample lawns and smaller public spaces, is significantly better for a city’s ecosystem and residents.
In times of rapid urbanization, the Exeter-based authors of a new study in September’s Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment argue that setting aside larger parkland, or “land sparing,” is key for environmental stability globally. (The latest U.N. forecast estimates that two-thirds of world’s population will live in cities by 2050; more than half of the current population already does.)
 
“There are a lot of studies that show that gardens are good for ecosystems, nature and biodiversity, and that is absolutely true,” says Iain Stott, one of the authors. “But the key point here is: If you don’t include large contiguous green spaces, then you’re probably not going to be providing a., as high as amount of ecosystem services as you could, and b., as many ecosystem services as you could.”
 
An ecosystem service is an ecological benefit, like whether it can support robust foodways, or has favorable conditions for flood management or inspires fond connections to local heritage through its terrain.
 
The researchers examined landscapes in nine cities. The services they homed in on in were: carbon storage (both aboveground and below), water infiltration, human well-being, agricultural production, pollination, pest control, noise reduction, air purification and temperature regulation. The results of their analysis found that land sparing produced more gains in almost every category.
 
Now, you may be wondering how something like noise reduction potential would be greater in a dense urban environment. This is because the data accounts for how sound disperses in the parklands as well. Quite basically, it’s a case of: “If a tree falls in the forest, does it make a sound?” These larger nature preserves similarly swayed the results for evenness of temperature and air quality.
 
This, Stott says, is a big reason why smaller green spaces and street trees remain crucial.
 
“If you can plant trees on the street, and have other green infrastructure in the urban areas, it’s actually quite important to do so,” says Stott.
 
The positive effects of nearby green space on physical and mental health make an excellent case for incorporating smaller parks too. Health was a category where land sparing actually fell short, researchers found.
 
The exact ecological mechanisms that make land sparing more successful in the other focus areas need more study. Some basic things are knowable though. In the way that more bees could fly more from to flower to flower in a trail, residents who are able to walk, bike and share transit as they commute could leave behind lighter carbon footprints, and a wider range of food could be cultivated in an expanse, just to give a few examples.
 
The findings suggest that there is something about sprawl that frustrates the delicate connectivity in an ecosystem between organisms that neighbor one another. And while sparser development is frequently labeled “suburban,” low-density neighborhoods are extremely common in cities too. According to Alan Mallach, a senior fellow at the Center for Community Progress, dense urbanist dreamscapes are more so “pockets” in American cities, with the exception of places like San Francisco and New York. (For a more global perspective, consider this 2011 report, a number-crunch of 326 studies on urban development. It revealed that “[a]cross all regions and for all three decades [of analysis], urban land expansion rates are higher than or equal to urban population growth rates, suggesting that urban growth is becoming more expansive than compact.”)
 
Cities aren’t inherently dangerous for the environment; poorly planned urban development is.
 
Stott says their study takes a side on what that means. “In this long-running debate about compact versus sprawling development,” he says, “this is just a way of taking that old debate, and explicitly including green space as a part of that.”

Fonte: NextCity


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VEJA O QUE NITERÓI ESTÁ FAZENDO COM RELAÇÃO AOS SEUS PARQUES E ÁREAS VERDES:

  • UNIDADES DE CONSERVAÇÃO:

PARNIT
NITERÓI MAIS VERDE - Visita ao Morro do Castro, no Barreto, para planejar a implantação de áreas protegidas na Zona Norte da cidade
 
PRO-Sustentável (recursos para a implantação do Niterói Mais Verde):
 
 
  •  PARQUES URBANOS E ÁREAS VERDES MENORES
Vice-prefeito Axel Grael visita o Parque das Águas
HORTO DO FONSECA - Dia de festa para reinauguração do Horto Botânico do Fonseca
PARQUE DAS ÁGUAS EDUARDO TRAVASSOS - visita ao local com técnicos que estão elaborando projeto de revitalização e reabertura à visitação
CHÁCARA DO VINTÉM: uma relíquia da história do abastecimento de água em Niterói
Prefeitura de Niterói assina contrato para revitalização do Parque das Águas
Niterói ganha sua primeira estação meteorológica
Parque da Cidade ganha reforma para atrair turistas em Niterói
Prefeitura de Niterói assina contrato para revitalização do Parque das Águas
Parque da Cidade ganha reforma para atrair turistas em Niterói

  • NITERÓI CONTRA QUEIMADAS
NITERÓI CONTRA AS QUEIMADAS - Niterói forma primeira turma do curso de Defesa Civil contra queimadas em vegetação
NITERÓI CONTRA AS QUEIMADAS - saiba mais detalhes técnicos sobre o programa anunciado pela Prefeitura de Niterói
NITERÓI CONTRA QUEIMADAS: Bombeiros firmam parceria com Prefeitura de Niterói
NITERÓI CONTRA QUEIMADAS - Prefeitura de Niterói lança programa de combate às queimadas
NITERÓI CONTRA QUEIMADAS - Corpo de Bombeiros planeja novo quartel para Niterói
NITERÓI CONTRA QUEIMADAS - Bombeiros de folga vão receber extra para combater incêndios em Niterói
Início da série de ações de prevenção às queimadas
PREFEITURA DE NITERÓI VAI ÀS COMUNIDADES COM MAIOR INCIDÊNCIA DE INCÊNDIOS EM VEGETAÇÃO PARA PREVENIR E CONSCIENTIZAR CONTRA RISCOS DO FOGO
Prefeitura inicia nesta segunda-feira série de ações de prevenção contra queimadas
NITERÓI SEM QUEIMADAS: Prefeitura conclui programa de prevenção e controle de incêndios em vegetação
Muitos focos de queimadas em Niterói. Responsáveis pelos incêndios serão investigadosNovo mecanismo para combater incêndios em Niterói
LUTANDO CONTRA AS QUEIMADAS EM NITERÓI
ATENÇÃO: ALERTAMOS PARA O ELEVADO RISCO DE INCÊNDIOS NAS ENCOSTAS (Niterói)
Queimadas: mitos e verdades
  • OUTRAS POSTAGENS AFINS
PARQUES - GESTÃO: Lei que autoriza cobrança de ‘pedágio verde’ na Ilha Grande é aprovada
Morros de Niterói recebem cinco mil mudas, e prefeitura promete plantar mais 11 mil em um ano
How Do You Create A Successful Urban Park?








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