It is more than just about recognising how good greening initiatives look and feel – which obviously has some significant wellbeing aesthetic - but more about how meaningful they really are and how embedded they are in ideas about resilience, sustainability, responsibility social issues and ethics. Green solutions must now not just be good to look at they must be “hard working”, they should create a framework that defines an inspirational environment for physical and sensory encounters with nature whilst also sustaining and enhancing our core natural resources of cleaner air, water and extensive biodiversity.
Our planet: our nature
The success of designing in a mindset of integrated systems will also come down to a passionate vision and a resounding commitment to carry it out. We are duty bound as a group of designers and multidisciplinary consultants to deliver the very best in integrated infrastructure, building and landscape projects including significant individual buildings that incorporate excellent vertical greening initiatives. The scope of some of these larger scale projects require very fast appreciation and understanding of new technologies and how they can be applied into our work. So, in a way, the success of the landscape profession has a reciprocal affect to the challenges of being able to innovate, learn and execute these new initiatives.
At the forefront of our minds we must consider how our designs “feel” and more and more the design of city greenery is driven by our ability to think experientially – using landscape as a tool to shape emotions, cities, perceptions and atmosphere. These sorts of integrated responses make very deliberate moves to consider how people perceive landscape, move through them, engage with them and use them over time. They thrive from consideration of wide-ranging ideas, creating subtle playful moments but are also always true to the notion that biodiversity within the most urban of environments is completely possible. We must continue to fuse our man-made and the natural worlds to curate moments that encourage people to really think about how we can encourage a future that balances our needs with the wonders of nature.
What are the simple and practical Steps to bring forward?
I think that in a way there are a few key things that we simply must do to encourage a more symbiotic approach to how we develop our built infrastructure along with our green infrastructure. They must been seen to evolve as one combined system that includes engagement of a holistic experience. For example, a new city office tower that grows to be acknowledged as much for its landscape identity as its architectural identity.
It’s not about putting a few trees around building edges, roof tops or balconies anymore and then standing back and thinking what a great landscape design. It must be about how the building feeds off of its landscape overlay. How does the building capture rainwater and return it to its inner gardens? How does it facilitate growth, maturity and succession in its planted and “living” parts? We also need to develop a much more “joined up approach” to how we prepare and plan for new types of city defining projects – large or small - and a better way to stay in touch with our existing communities– and animals – that will inhabit these spaces.
Nature’s power
Biodiversity has an intrinsic value and represents a key element of any landscape. It defines a cities character. Otters in the heart of Singapore. Peregrine falcons nesting in the heart of London. Habitat fragmentation is one of the biggest threats to the conservation of wildlife and natural ecosystems in urban areas.
We can help by increasing and restoring the functionality and connectivity of urban and peri-urban natural landscapes. In fact, the more heterogeneous, undisturbed and interconnected our green infrastructure is, the more resilient our ecosystems will be. Although all green space can contribute to biodiversity conservation, it is important to conserve as much as is possible of the original natural vegetation – grasslands, forests, wetlands and riparian corridors (the zone between land and a river or stream.). This is because these are unique habitats for native plants and animals. This is harder to achieve of course in urban environments.
Diversity also concerns human communities. Urban forests are fundamental for maintaining local identity, providing natural experiences, creating diverse landscapes and maintaining cultural traditions. They help create significant landscapes with symbolism that preserves a cultural diversity that characterises most cities. Caring for urban forest and trees will help younger generations understand the value of nature, allowing them to enjoy all the social and natural aspects of diversity.
To some degree we must believe that nature knows best when it comes to survival and self-regulation. We can give it a helping hand of course by creating the right conditions, protecting natural habitats, by reducing active urban replacement of wildlife habitats, by allowing natural forest regeneration and by supporting reintroducing of natural systems and species that have disappeared as a result of human action.
Then…it is about stewardship, ongoing support and our belief that the smallest of interventions can make a difference to the global challenges that we face.
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