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  2. Urban green space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urban_green_space

    Adequate urban green space access can be associated with better respiratory health outcomes, as long as green space areas meet certain requirements. A study showed that mortality due to pneumonia and chronic lower respiratory diseases could be reduced by minimizing fragmentation of green spaces and increasing the largest patch percentage of ...

  3. Green urbanism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_urbanism

    Plants can be used for air-purification and narrowing of roads for urban cooling. Moreover, preserving green space, gardens and farmland, maintaining a green belt around the city is necessity to absorb CO 2. Sustainable transport and good public space. Compact and poly-centric cities: An integration of non-motorised transport, such as, cycling ...

  4. Community greens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_Greens

    Community Greens, sometimes referred to as backyard commons, urban commons, or pocket neighborhoods, are shared open green spaces on the inside of city blocks, created either when residents merge backyard space or reclaim underutilized urban land such as vacant lots and alleyways. These shared spaces are communally used and managed only by the ...

  5. Green infrastructure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_infrastructure

    Some people might expect that green spaces are extravagant and excessively difficult to maintain, but high-performing green spaces can provide tangible economic, ecological, and social benefits. [120] For example: Urban forestry in an urban environment can supplement stormwater management and reduce associated energy usage costs and runoff. [10]

  6. Environmental gentrification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_Gentrification

    Urban green spaces are areas that are in an open space with the looks of a natural environment with greenery and at times water features.Green spaces do promote an aesthetically pleasing look and physical activity amongst people in the community, which promotes physical and mental well-being. [32]

  7. Zero-carbon city - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-carbon_city

    The development of green space in cities, particularly long-lived trees, is a cost-effective method of carbon sequestration. [8] [60] The inclusion of green space in urban areas can also help with wide variety of other issues, from stormwater [61] to mental health. [62]

  8. Open space reserve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_space_reserve

    A green belt is a general area of open space surrounding an urban area. Green infrastructure is the total mass and viability of undeveloped, natural, and agricultural land and waterways, protected or not protected, within a particular community or region.

  9. Park system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Park_system

    A park system, also known as an open space system, is a network of green spaces that are connected by public walkways, bridleways or cycleways. The concept first emerged with the need to minimize fragmentation of natural environments and was referred to as " patch and corridor ."