03279nam a22002177a 4500003000400000005001700004008004100021020001800062040001000080082001500090100002400105245010200129260003000231300001000261365003600271505258700307650001902894942001202913999001502925952012102940OSt20220311114330.0220304b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d a9781138187870 ckrvia a711.4bLOD1 aLoder, Angela9443810aSmall Scale Urban Greening: Creating Places of Health, Creativity, and Ecological Sustainability  aNew YorkbRoutledgec2020 a250p. aRs.bRs. 3688cRs.d33eRs.2471 aIntroduction: Urbanities, Nature, and Re-thinking Urban Greenspace p.1, Chapter 1: Nature, Health, Well-being and Sense of Place: what do we know? What don’t we agree on? p.15, Biological paradigm: adaptive and utility p.18, The Social Construction Paradigm: constructed, political, and relational p.30, New directions in nature, health, and well-being research p.37, Moving forward: research, policy, and practice on nature and health in cities p.39, Chapter 2: Ecology in the margins: Green Infrastructure and stormwater management p.55, Ecosystem services, green infrastructure, and stormwater: a short history of re-thinking water in cities p.57, City-wide approaches to urban greening and stormwater: the case of Philadelphia p.61, Piece-by-piece layering and conversion: urban greening and stormwater in Toronto p.70, Small-scale urban greening and green infrastructure: reflections p.82, Links to research and moving forward p.83, Chapter 3: Meadows in the sky: a green roof case study: Introduction p.104, What do we know about green roofs, health, and well-being? P.106, Methods p.109, Results: what did they think and feel about green roofs? p.121, Implications for policy, research, and the human relationship to nature p.129, Asking the same questions in a different way: a survey p.134, Lessons learned from quantitative versus qualitative methods p.136, Conclusion p.138, Chapter 4: Reclaiming the city: vacant lots and post-industrial corridors: Introduction p.145, Marginal spaces: re-greening neglected urban spaces p.148, Case studies: Chicago and Philadelphia p.148, Post-industrial urban greening: elevated parks; Case study: Philadelphia’s Rail Park p.169; Case study: Chicago’s The 606 p.174, Small-scale urban greening, interstitial, and post-industrial space: reflections and moving forward p.181, Research and the real-world: opportunities for collaboration and change p.186, Conclusion: Policy lessons and Research Implications: Connecting urbanites to nature and re-thinking urban greenspace: Introduction p.205, Policy p.205, Review of case study conclusions p.206, Lessons learned, looking aheadp.212 Frame the issue p.214, Governance, funding, and legislation p.215, Tactical urbanism, community outreach, and research p.216, A way forward: learning by doing, adaptive planning p.217, Research context; How do we value urban nature as experienced with SSUG projects? p.219, How we experience SSUG: implications for research p.221, Education and design implications for health, well-being, and ecological sustainability p.227, Looking ahead p.23210aUrban Planning 2ddccBK c9605d9605 00102ddc4070aKRVIAbKRVIAd2022-02-22eWord Bookshopl1o711.4 LODp8135r2022-06-06s2022-05-17w2022-03-04yBK