Thursday, October 2, 2008

7 Steps To Green a City

7 Steps to Green A City
Is Your City Heading in a Sustainable Direction?
9.30.2008

http://www.thedailygreen.com/print-this/environmental-news/community-news/green-cities-88093002
http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/community-news/green-cities-88093002?src=nl&mag=tdg&list=dgr&kw=ist

I've long been a fan of University of Maryland architecture professor Roger Lewis, especially for his "Shaping the City" columns in The Washington Post. Roger was articulating the principles of smart growth and livable urbanism long before the rest of us, and his column has in many ways been a model for this blog.

In his newest entry, Thinking of Bolder Shades of Green,
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/09/26/AR2008092601695.html
Roger poses the question whether we can go beyond green building techniques and greener personal choices such as using CFL light bulbs and "make an entire city green." He lays out seven sensible principles for doing so:

Employ smart growth so that future land development and density are linked to transit and other transportation infrastructure

Create and maintain a fine-grain street pattern for walkability and managed congestion

Invest in state-of-the-art bus and rail transit

Use street trees and plantings to provide shade, reduce heat, and filter runoff

Expand and preserve a city-wide network of connected parks and other open space

Use open drainage swales and ground absorption to absorb Stormwater rather than relying exclusively on underground piping

Employ renewable energy technology to generate electricity on a metropolitan scale

Well done, Roger: what a great framework that would make for guiding future investments in city infrastructure.

These ideas and more were discussed at a forum on greening the world's capital cities
http://capitalsalliance.org/webpages/Meetingspages/UpcomingMeeting.aspx
(although their applicability certainly isn't limited to capitals) held last week in Washington. Roger served as a panel moderator, and conference participants included NRDC's Frances Beinecke as well as numerous NRDC collaborators and friends such as Harriet Tregoning (now head of planning for DC), Dick Moe (National Trust for Historic Preservation), Tom Hicks (US Green Building Council), and Congressman Earl Blumenauer (D-OR), among others.

- Kaid Benfield
director, NRDC Smart Growth Program
Originally posted in the NRDC's Switchboard blog

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