WE NEED TO COMPLETELY RETHINK OUR CITIES’ RELATIONSHIP WITH WATER
~ Isaac Bell Holmstrom ~
Recent analysis shows that extreme flood likelihood across the UK is leading to
insurance companies entirely withdrawing from at-risk areas, with certain
locations being potentially abandoned. Working with the latest data from Aviva,
the Guardian reports significant flood risks across the country, particularly in
London, Manchester and the North East of England, drawing attention to the
extreme costs required in adaptation, let alone mitigation.
Tenbury Wells, Worcestershire, is now unable to insure its public buildings, and
even individual property protection is becoming precarious. First the insurers
write off the area, then businesses will stop financing development. Would a
local council fund the opening of a new hospital, or even repairs to the old
one, if the town will be underwater in two years? Or will the logic of
investment and return lead to the abandonment of the town, a sacrifice zone?
Those tied to the land—people too poor to move or homeowners locked into
mortgages while prices plummet—will be left behind.
Serious investment is needed to change the direction of urban growth, but as
fields of new-build single-family homes seep out into the green belt, it is
clear that the government wants to build, and to build outwards. To meet its
goals of 300,000 units built annually, Westminster played around with the idea
of officially mandating authorities to construct homes to specific quotas,
despite reductions in central funding to local councils and a corresponding rise
in bankruptcies. But with only five construction companies building roughly half
of the national housing market, we won’t be seeing innovation reach commercial
construction any time soon.
There are incredible research-driven sustainable construction materials
available, specifically designed to mitigate flood risks, but producers are
limited by expensive certifications and highly localised supply chains.
Cash-strapped councils will be driven to choose cheap contractors that continue
building in the current direction—always favouring hard infrastructure like
underground water runoff tanks. Across the world, even the most progressive hard
infrastructure flood defences are short-term solutions; in Venice, the MOSE, a
controllable barrier that seals the lagoon entirely during the aqua alta, the
high tide, is being utilised more and more frequently, and by 2050 will have to
remain up permanently—with massive impacts for the local environment.
Hard infrastructure is inflexible, it has strict limits and is essentially
worthless after those limits are passed. Moreover, such projects are typically
far from the local community they are designed to protect. Your average person
can’t build a runoff tank, can’t fix one, and probably doesn’t know where they
are located. A certain “learned helplessness” sets in when residents feel no
control over their built environment, when only highly specialised technicians
can modify it or, crucially for this scenario, repair it.
The private sector won’t help us here. Commodity-based strategies, such as those
suggested in the Guardian article—“installing flood doors, tiling floors or
raising electric sockets at ground level”—are feasible only for some, and
certainly not for the most vulnerable.
Instead, we need to take the neighbourhood or the city as a whole, and
completely rethink its relationship with water. Sustainable drainage systems
(SuDS) focus on maintaining as much water as possible at the surface level—in
swales, ponds, and rain gardens—maximising soil infiltration to then permit
efficient and rapid evapotranspiration. But remodelling the urban surface
requires confrontations with the entire built environment, with streets and
roads, public parks and private gardens, brownfield sites and all future
construction work.
Working from the bottom up, building local power to decide on, implement, and
maintain the green and blue spaces of a local community, is a step towards
liberation. Depaving—collectively ripping up paving slabs—is the most visual
symbol of the dismantling of the built status quo, but depends on a committed
local base that can seriously take care of its environment. The private sector
and the central government are unwilling to take this on, and local governments
are unable to. Communal decisions on urban land use are the only way to survive
the climate crisis.
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Image by TCExplorer CC BY-SA 2.0
The post Keeping a community afloat appeared first on Freedom News.
Tag - cities
INSTEAD OF “GREEN SPACE” WE MUST BUILD ECOSYSTEMS IN OUR CITIES
~ Mathieu Perchat, from Le Mouton Noir ~
Vegetation in the city, often reduced to the term “green space”, evokes a more
complex reality than that of a simple place of rest or walk. The term itself,
“green space”, expresses the limitation of this concept: it does not designate a
place in its own right, but a portion of territory planned according to criteria
of utility rather than aesthetic or ecological ones.
Green space, often reduced to a simple “green”, excludes art, or at least
reduces it to a simple decorative packaging. By losing its name and its essence,
the urban garden is emptied of any value other than that of hygiene.
In this approach, lawns, gardens and planted paths, as well as street furniture,
participate in the form of the city, but under a logic of health control, a
hygienist policy. Air, water and vegetation are treated as abstractions,
disregarding climatic and geographical diversity. For example, urban gardens
become a tool for combating pests, such as rats. As a result, these spaces have
no real connection with the larger ecosystem. Ecological criteria are neglected
in favour of ornamental objectives; thus, the dryness of the soil and the
effects of shade are neglected, accentuating the artificiality of plant choices.
The most striking example is that of trees. They are mainly planted in cities
for their aesthetic role, often reduced to a beautification function. For some
decision-makers, this aestheticism is summed up in making public spaces more
pleasant while contributing to the sanitation of municipalities. Beauty and
hygiene are intertwined in this approach, where plants become a simple tool for
fighting pests, such as rats.
TOWARDS URBAN VEGETATION?
It is urgent to rethink the role of vegetation in the city. Instead of being
reduced to a utilitarian function, can it become an aesthetic and symbolic link
between urbanized spaces and other ecosystems? The city of tomorrow should be a
welcoming space for a plurality of living beings: humans, animals and plants.
This need is all the more evident in the face of the impact of urban sprawl,
which degrades nearby and distant ecosystems.
Plants, in their landscaping potential, affect various scales: from individual
balconies to entire cities. The articulation of these scales, both politically
and ecologically, represents a fundamental challenge for rethinking urban
planning. Plants are not simply a component of the landscape; they embody strong
symbolic values, associated with the diversity of species, and offer
unprecedented plasticity to urban planners and planning professionals.
For residents, vegetation represents a local nature, essential to their
well-being. It is a crucial resource for biodiversity, particularly in densely
populated areas. The implementation of vegetation by municipalities and
landlords is therefore part of a broader thinking about urban public space. But
spontaneous vegetation, often perceived as uncontrolled, also contributes to
shaping public space, by highlighting contrasts with planned vegetation.
A sensory and ecological challenge
The perception of urban vegetation is not limited to a simple visual
appreciation. Odorus, colours, flavours and textures play a crucial role in our
relationship with the environment. These aesthetic dimensions influence our
behaviour towards the city and nature. Unfortunately, institutions in charge of
urban ecology struggle to integrate this sensory and participatory biodiversity
that residents create through their own practices.
It is therefore essential to encourage policies that promote wildlife in the
city. Vegetation should not be thought of solely through the prism of planning,
but as a real vector of ecosystems and diversity.
Residents, city dwellers and citizens: a plural relationship to urban space
In this context, it is interesting to examine the different relationships that
individuals have with urban green environments. Three main categories of
populations emerge:
* Residents, strongly attached to their housing, consider their home as a
protective shelter, a place of sensations and materiality. They are
particularly sensitive to living conditions in the city and directly perceive
the benefits or inconveniences of urban vegetation. Their relationship to
space is sensory, marked by a desire for comfort and harmony with their
environment.
* City dwellers mainly use the city through a utilitarian practice, often
centred on the car and travel. Their perception of places is determined by
their use: ease of travel, access to services and parking. This group of
people largely rejects an aesthetic approach to the city, preferring
immediate functionality.
* Citizens are involved in the collective life of their neighbourhood. They
favour public transportation and the efficiency of the metro, willingly
mingling with the urban crowd. Their attachment to places is indirect, often
mediated by human and social relationships. However, this group tends to
forget that the city is also a biological and physical space, where
biodiversity plays a key role.
Conclusion: towards a reconciliation with urban nature
Urban morphology constantly interferes with our desire to live. A few green
islands, terraces or planted courtyards, break with a predominantly concrete
urban landscape. However, these spaces remind us of the importance of nature in
urban daily life.
It is imperative to rethink our relationship with vegetation in the city, no
longer as a simple tool for development or beautification, but as an essential
component of our well-being, our sensitivity and our relationship with the
world. The dialogue between ecology, aesthetics and politics must be intensified
to create cities where nature finds its rightful place.
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