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Report of
COST Action C11 - Greenstructure and Urban
Planning

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The
findings of the COST C11 Action are being published
as an EU- COST research report book (440 pages).
This report will be available for purchase in 2005.
For details -
contact
the COSTC11 chairman
The
same version of the report is available here in an
ebook format - each chapter can be downloaded
independently. Please note: in this format, which
is designed to allow the information to be
downloaded speedily so that it can to be read on
screen, the quality of the reproduction of the
graphics inevitably suffers - any reader requiring
to view higher quality images before the book is
available is referred to the preliminary papers
which were available
online as part of the COST C11
action
from 2004.
The
work of the COST C11 Action involved participants
from 15 european countries.
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Any papers on this website may be downloaded by students and practitioners for research purposes. If they are quoted from in any document, the origin must always referenced - all rights reserved - ©COST C11 Action, 2005 and individual authors named on each paper.
Chapter
One - Greenstructure and urban planning - Introduction - the
purpose and findings - pages 1 to 39
IIntroduction,
B. Duhem
Green structure and urban planning, general outcomes of Cost
C11, S. Tjallingii
Chapter
Two - Case studies in greenstructure planning - pages 40 to
131
The green structure of Sheffield,
A. Beer
Contrasting green clothes in Marseilles city, A.C.
Werquin
The Breda experience, the role of green structure in
urban planning, S. Tjallingii
The green structure of Munich, the need for and risk
of regional cooperation, B. Oppermann, S.
Pauleit
Milan and the Regional green structure of Lombardy,
M. Meriggi
Warsaw, problems of green structure planning
and management,
E. Kaliszuk, B. Szulczewska
Rome case study, strategies for green structure
planning and maintenance, L. Martincigh
Oslo, a vision for a sustainable future, S. Nyhuus,
G. Grundt
Green structures of Ceske Budejovice, Czech Republic,
I. Hanouskova
Chapter
Three - An ecological approach to green structure planning -
pages 132 to 216
Introduction, S.
Pauleit
Green structure patterns, S. Pauleit and E. Kaliszuk
Biodiversity, I. Vähä-Piikkiö and O.
Maijala
Green structure and water, S. Tjallingii
Climate and green structure planning, E. Kaliszuk and S.
Pauleit
Green structure, farming and organic matter, E. Erhart
Pests and diseases, I. Hanouskova
Case
studies - ecology and green structure
planning:
Ceske Budejovjice, I. Hanouskova
Helsinki, I. Vähä-Piikkiö, O. Maijala
Herning, S. Guldager, U. Reeh
Munich, S. Pauleit
Oslo, S. Nyhuus
Utrecht, S. Tjallingii
Vienna, E. Erhart
Warsaw, E. Kaliszuk
Human
issues and Policies - pages 217 to
398
Chapter
Four - Human issues and green structure planning - pages 217
to 316
Introduction,
G. Lindholm
The origin of urban green structures, K. Jorgensen
The bird and the beast, philosophical concepts and
dichotomies in planning the urban green, K. Lapintie
Eight experienced qualities in urban open spaces,P.
Grahn
Role of urban green in the creation of prefered urban
environments, K. Zaleckis
Leisure activities and natural spaces (Marseilles), A.C.
Werquin
Environmental comfort in green urban spaces: design tools,
G. Scudo
Valuing green structure, the use of hedonic models, J.M.
Halleux
Qualities of agricultural land, evaluation of the
multifunctionality, K. Wagner
The greenery in some French new towns, B. Duhem, A.C.
Werquin
Urban planning for a quality dense green structure,
Stockholm map and park programme, A. Stahle
A green-network, green structure and non motorized
transport, L. Martincigh
Practices in planning and design of urban green areas in
Belgium, P. Hanocq
"Green structure" -; the term discussion, E. Kaliszuk,
B. Szulczewska
Conclusion, G. Lindholm
Chapter
Five - Policies for green structure and urban planning -
pages 317 to 398
Introduction, B. Oppermann
Case
Studies - policies for green structure as applied to urban
planning:
Inter-regional, regional or inter-municipal level and scale
of green structure arrangements in Italy: Ticino Valley, M.
Meriggi
The integration of forest doscourse in spatial planning: The
Ghent Park Forest, Belgium, A. Van Herzele
Green structure planning in Madrid city and metropolitan
Area, J.M. Chapa
Green planning as a prerequisite: Aarhus, Denmark, K.
Attwell
The green fingers of Helsinki: Finland, M. Eronen
Protecting Mediterranean urban forms: Marseilles, France,
A.C. Werquin
The Vistula valley case in Warsaw, Poland, B.
Szulczewska
Redesign of the river Isar in Munich, Germany, B.
Oppermann
Local participation in urban planning in Sweden, B.
Malbert
A partnership approach to regenerating public greenspace in
Sheffield: the role of the Sheffield Wildlife Trust, C.
Harrison
Of 'green' policies and practices in the urbanized region,
Biesland, Randstad, the Netherlands, M. Buizer
Chapter
Six - Epilog - pages 399 tp 440
Papers
by key-note speakers
Our
policies for green structures in urban planning, J.
Bendl
Green areas and the quality of life of elderly people , C.
Costanzi
Green structures : refuges of habitat diversity in cities,
T. Kucera
Explicit green systems and implicit green structures, S.
Schöbel
Space in European cities -; past, present and future,
R. Stiles
Community planning for functional green public spaces,
M.Vesely
Conclusion
- the final debate
Green structure and urban development, issues of the debate
session, S. Tjallingii
LEGAL NOTICE
Neither the European Commission nor any person acting on behalf of the Commission including all the authors of any of the papers produced during the COSTC11 action and the website managers for COSTC11 is responsible for the use which might be made of the following information
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Research
group web-pages - including preliminary papers and case
studies
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