Thursday 8 October 2015

URBAN LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY

URBAN LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY


“The hydrologic cycle, the nutrient cycle, and the food chain are essential to human life; they sustain us, and they link us to the environment in which we live and to the other organisms…that share our habitat. Yet to most people, these cycles are abstractions, something read about in textbooks…The urban landscape affords abundant opportunities to celebrate these cycles, to make legible and tangible the connections they forge.” (Spirn 1988b)

-Ecological Urbanism: A framework for the design of resilient cities , Anne Whiston Spirn 

The Emergence of Urban Landscape Ecology 

COMBINATION BETWEEN URBAN ECOLOGY AND LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY

URBAN ECOLOGY
Scientific study of the relation of living organisms with each other and their surroundings in the context of an urban environment.
LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY
Science of studying and improving the relationship between spatial pattern and ecological (and socioeconomic) processes on multiple scales.
URBAN LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY

Science of studying and improving the relationship between urban landscape pattern and ecological processes for achieving urban sustainability


The Different Perspectives


How to Achieve Sustainability Through Urban Landscape Ecology? 

DIVERSITY
Promote social and plant diversity
DEMOCRACY
Taking into consideration the community’s needs, values and priorities (Collective/participatory design)
SOCIAL JUSTICE
Responsible land use planning
BALANCE
Ecologically, aesthetically (include the arts) and functionally balanced 

URBAN HORTICULTURE 

DEFINITION
It is the science and art of growing fruits, vegetables and ornamental plants to maintain and improve the surrounding urban area.
HISTORY
Urban horticulture progressed with the birth of cities and the increase in experimentation and exchange of ideas.
Industrial Revolution:  The increasing population rapidly changed the landscape and replaced green spaces with brick and asphalt.
19th  century: Horticulture used in urban areas as response to growing unhealthy conditions.
21st  century: Turning Point in history; importance of horticulture as a functional aspect of urban areas: Markets, small farms, edible gardens etc..


BENEFITS OF URBAN HORTICULTURE
Scenic
Positive Psychological impact ( Frederick Law Olmsted, the
designer of New York City's Central Park )
Health awareness
Social activity enhanced
Active learners at school
Food security
Economic growth



URBAN HORTICULTURE IN BEIRUT

About 35% of Lebanon’s inhabitants live in Beirut and its suburbs.
This dense city that raises several concerns one of which is food security.
Reevaluating the potential of urban agriculture.




“The walled city was structured with a main coastal axis with promenade reaching different quarters,…private gardens were cultivated and boarded with lemons and orange trees planted in alleys with profusion of flowers in the middle.” (Lenoble 1996, Kassir 2003)

CASE STUDIES

Wonder Forest  
 By Wassim Melki Beirut, Lebanon

Aim to plant 60,000 trees on Beirut’s rooftops
One tree per rooftop would be as many trees as NY Central Park
Planting olives and citrus fruits that thrive in Beirut’s Mediterranean climate
Environmental and social benefits 




Lafayette Greens 
By Kenneth Weikal Landscape Architecture  Detroit, USA

Urban agriculture, urban fabric, urban sustainability
Engaging public space
Participatory, aesthetically pleasing and productive landscape
Sustainable approach: Material re-use, Storm-water management, urban biodiversity, efficient
growing methods




Glass Factory 
by Thomas Chung  Shenzhen, China

Part of Shenzhen Honk Kong Biennal
Produce culture instead of products
Collective effort
"It’s reconnecting city dwellers with nature, teaching consumers about homegrown food, and
offering a more sustainable, accessible food supply."





Cultural Concern or Ecological Objectives? 

Authors:  

Audrey Kurkjian, Zeina Maaz, Jana Tabbara & Léa Zaytoun

Thursday 1 October 2015

To what degree can permaculture practice overlap or be integrated with landscape architecture?



Permaculture is the conscious design of “cultivated” ecosystems that have the  diversity, stability & resilience of ecosystems. It is a harmonious integration of the  people with the landscape in such a way that the land grows in richness,  productivity & aesthetic beauty.

Permaculture started in the 80s. It is the design of “cultivated” ecosystems that have the diversity stability and resilience of natural ecosystems.
Permaculture is based on three principles:
Earth Care (care of the Earth):
àIncludes animals plants air water land (living and non living)
àProvides for all things (to be able to multiply)
Care of People:
Ensures that people have access to those resources (need of an equitable sustainable society).

Tyrant Farms,  Sout Carolina

PERMANENT + AGRICULTURE    ------------    PERMANENT + C U LTU R E

principles

Principles of Ecology Design                                                           Permaculture Principles

permaculture & sustainability
According to Bill Mollison:
_The systems we construct should  last as long as possible, and take  least maintenance.

_The systems should produce not  only for their own needs, but the  needs of the people creating or  controlling them.

_The systems should store or  conserve more energy than that  used to construct or maintain  them.

At a certain point, the total energy yielded  from the site exceeds the total amount  invested and the system  goes ‘into profit’.

design patterns:   Fractal Geometry
_repetition of patterns  across different scales
_underlying order
_language of nature


Concept of fractal geometry: repetition of the patterns of nature on different scales
This idea of repetition of patterns affected the design field, permaculture included
Patterns:
  • The branch: gathers, distributes, increases exchange of water, energy and materials
  • The lobe: presence of edgesàmost productive part of a system where most interesting things happen (ex: including rocks in water treatment, vegetation will grow between the rocks)
  • The spiral: speeding up or slow down / concentrate or disperse (ex: branches from stems grow in a spiral to maximize sun exposure)
  • The net: used to strengthen or reinforce (ex: straw mulch stacked at different angles will be more wind resistant)
  • The wave: provides pulsation and timing 
  • The scatter: introduces the element of chance, break things up




case study_ecological design

The  Floating Gardens  By  Turenscape, China

_Location: Taizhou City, China
_Size: 21.3 hectares
_Date of Completion: March 2004
_Client:   Government of Huangyan  District
_Awards: ASLA Design Honor Award,  2006; Human Habitat Award, 2005, Ministry of Construction, China






This project developed in Taizhou City by the Chinese firm Turenscape acts as an ecological solution to the canalization of rivers that the Chinese government has so gotten used to treating its river with. The firm aimed to design a project that would not only cater to the ecological aspect of the site, but also to include and integrate the human and social aspects. Therefore, its name 'The Floating Gardens' indicates the two layers that constitute the project. The human layer is "floating" on top of the ecological layer via bridges and platforms which respect the natural cycle of the river by allowing to flood seasonally. 

The Chikukwa Permaculture Project in Zimbabwe started as a small backyard project by one of the families in the village, as instructed by a couple of German teachers. Soon, the project made a ripple effect and was adopted by the neighborhood, the village, and finally the surrounding 5 villages, to encompass a total of 6 villages. The area had been suffering from dry springs, barren hills, and poor harvests, which the adoption of this design technique changed over time. The villages now have more prosperous terraces, and the water management scheme proved to be successful. 

case study_permaculture design

The  Chikukwa Permaculture Project, Zimbabwe

_Location: Far east border of  Zimbabwe, next to Mozambique  Near a big national park
_Where? Six villages of the  Chikukwa clan
_Who? About 110 households per village 5,000 people



analysis process_sectors&zones


analysis process_water management

design layout

references
Çelik, F.  (2013). Ecological Landscape Design .  Turkey.
Leahy,  T.  (2013, August 15). THE  CHIKUKWA PERMACULTURE   PROJECT
(ZIMBABWE) THE FULL STORY. Retrieved from Permaculture Research Institute:  http://permaculturenews.org/2013/08/15/the-chikukwa-permaculture-project-zimba  bwe-the-full-story/
Solis, J. (n.d.). Es Facil Ser Verde. Retrieved from  http://www.esfacilserverde.com/portal25/green_project/index.html
The Floating Gardens -- Yongning River Park. (2007). Retrieved from Turenscape:  http://www.turenscape.com/english/projects/project.php?id=323