Making Sustainable Regional Design Strategies Successful

This paper identifies innovative methods of strategic spatial design to demonstrate the sustainable outcomes that can be achieved by adopting landscape practices to future-proof our cities and regions. A range of strategic landscape-led models and methodologies are investigated to reveal the structure, administrative processes and key elements that have been adopted in order to facilitate the integration of climate change environmental design and landscape quality. We have found that a strong established framework that demonstrates innovative project management and early integration of environmental ideas is critical in order to be able to deliver landscape schemes that appropriately identify and address current climatic and social challenges. Furthermore, to make a real difference in the way that professional practice and politics deal with landscape infrastructure, the project framework and key concepts related to landscape design and planning, such as low carbon design and spatial quality, need to be clearly supported by legislation and policy at all levels. Together with close attention to the importance of design, this approach is more likely to ensure effective implementation and smooth communication during the development of a landscape scheme, leading to higher levels of sustainability and resilience in the future.

[1]  Bruno Latour,et al.  Facing Gaia: Eight Lectures on the New Climatic Regime , 2017 .

[2]  Pierre Bélanger Landscape as Infrastructure: A Base Primer , 2016 .

[3]  David C. Prosperi,et al.  Planning for low carbon cities: Reflection on the case of Broward County, Florida, USA , 2011 .

[4]  J. Stephenson The Dimensional Landscape Model: Exploring Differences in Expressing and Locating Landscape Qualities , 2010 .

[5]  Adam C. Faruk,et al.  Environmental soundness: a pragmatic alternative to expectations of sustainable development in business strategy , 1999 .

[6]  P. Pinho,et al.  Encouraging low carbon policies through a Local Emissions Trading Scheme (LETS) , 2011 .

[7]  Jonathan A. Smith,et al.  Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis: Theory, Method and Research , 2009, QMiP Bulletin.

[8]  Yacob Mulugetta,et al.  Deliberating on low carbon development , 2010 .

[9]  Philip Berke,et al.  What Makes a Good Sustainable Development Plan? An Analysis of Factors That Influence Principles of Sustainable Development , 2004 .

[10]  M. Hodson,et al.  Cities and the low carbon transition , 2011 .

[11]  Angioletta Voghera EUROPEAN LANDSCAPE CONVENTION. POLICY AND PLANNING INNOVATIONS , 2012 .

[12]  J. Minx,et al.  A definition of “carbon footprint” , 2010 .

[13]  Michaël Meijer,et al.  A next step for sustainable urban design in the Netherlands , 2011 .

[14]  G. Fry,et al.  The shared landscape: what does aesthetics have to do with ecology? , 2007, Landscape Ecology.

[15]  J. Rouwendal,et al.  Heritage planning and spatial development in the Netherlands: changing policies and perspectives , 2014 .

[16]  D. Cosgrove Social formation and symbolic landscape , 1984 .

[18]  Pierre Bélanger,et al.  Landscape As Infrastructure , 2009, Landscape Journal.

[19]  Peng Zhou,et al.  What is Low-Carbon Development? A Conceptual Analysis , 2011 .

[20]  Frans Klijn,et al.  Design quality of room-for-the-river measures in the Netherlands: role and assessment of the quality team (Q-team) , 2013 .