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Ecologically-compatible urban planning : designing a healthier environment / Stefano Salata (DIST, Politecnico di Torino, Italy).

By: Salata, Stefano [author.]Material type: TextTextSeries: Emerald pointsPublisher: Emerald Publishing Limited, Description: 1 online resource (xxii, 158 pages)ISBN: 9781789737851Subject(s): City planning -- Environmental aspects | Urbanization -- Environmental aspects | Sustainable urban development | Social Science -- Sociology -- Urban | Urban & municipal planningAdditional physical formats: No titleDDC classification: 307.1216 LOC classification: HT166 | .S25 2019Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Part 1. Planning in the contemporary city: do urban plans still matter? -- Chapter 1. The contemporary city -- Chapter 2. Towards the paradigm of 'eco-systemic planning' -- Chapter 3. Eco-systemic planning reform -- Part 2. Acquiring new competencies -- Chapter 4. Ecosystem service mapping in land use plans: modelling with InVEST -- Part 3. Case studies -- Chapter 5. Case study one -- Chapter 6. Case study two: resilience is not sustainability -- Chapter 7. General conclusions.
Summary: Ecosystem service mapping is a fundamental part of developing healthier cities and ensuring environmentally-oriented land use. Ecologically-Compatible Urban Planning: Designing a Healthier Environment demonstrates that renewed collaboration between environmental scientists and urban planners is essential in reforming the traditional method of urban planning to meet the emerging issues posed by contemporary living in urban areas affected by climate change. The first part introduces the reader to the main challenges in urban planning by explaining how changing conditions require a new approach to spatial policies and a more ecological-oriented approach to the city. Part two demonstrates how the traditional approach to the ecological study of urban systems should be integrated with new competences to aid the decision-making phase during urban planning. Part three presents case studies that demonstrate how urban areas are vulnerable to climate conditions and how changing scenarios affect quality of life. This book demonstrates how to bridge the gap between the theoretical assessment of ecosystem service and its real utilization for land use planning practices.
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HT166 .S25 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available
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Includes index.

Includes bibliographical references.

Part 1. Planning in the contemporary city: do urban plans still matter? -- Chapter 1. The contemporary city -- Chapter 2. Towards the paradigm of 'eco-systemic planning' -- Chapter 3. Eco-systemic planning reform -- Part 2. Acquiring new competencies -- Chapter 4. Ecosystem service mapping in land use plans: modelling with InVEST -- Part 3. Case studies -- Chapter 5. Case study one -- Chapter 6. Case study two: resilience is not sustainability -- Chapter 7. General conclusions.

Ecosystem service mapping is a fundamental part of developing healthier cities and ensuring environmentally-oriented land use. Ecologically-Compatible Urban Planning: Designing a Healthier Environment demonstrates that renewed collaboration between environmental scientists and urban planners is essential in reforming the traditional method of urban planning to meet the emerging issues posed by contemporary living in urban areas affected by climate change. The first part introduces the reader to the main challenges in urban planning by explaining how changing conditions require a new approach to spatial policies and a more ecological-oriented approach to the city. Part two demonstrates how the traditional approach to the ecological study of urban systems should be integrated with new competences to aid the decision-making phase during urban planning. Part three presents case studies that demonstrate how urban areas are vulnerable to climate conditions and how changing scenarios affect quality of life. This book demonstrates how to bridge the gap between the theoretical assessment of ecosystem service and its real utilization for land use planning practices.

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