Nature-Based Solutions (Dec 2022)

A typology for urban Green Infrastructure to guide multifunctional planning of nature-based solutions

  • Laurence Jones,
  • Sally Anderson,
  • Jeppe Læssøe,
  • Ellen Banzhaf,
  • Anne Jensen,
  • David Neil Bird,
  • James Miller,
  • Michael G. Hutchins,
  • Jun Yang,
  • Joanne Garrett,
  • Tim Taylor,
  • Benedict W. Wheeler,
  • Rebecca Lovell,
  • David Fletcher,
  • Yueming Qu,
  • Massimo Vieno,
  • Marianne Zandersen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2
p. 100041

Abstract

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Urban Green Infrastructure (GI) provides multiple benefits to city inhabitants and can be an important component in nature-based solutions (NBS), but the ecosystem services that underpin those benefits are inconsistently quantified in the literature. There remain substantial knowledge gaps about the level of service supported by less studied GI types, e.g. cemeteries, or less-studied ecosystem services, e.g. noise mitigation. Decision-makers and planners in cities often face conflicting or incomplete information on the effectiveness of GI, particularly on their ability to provide a suite of co-benefits. Here, we describe a feature-based typology of GI which combines elements of land cover, land use and both ecological and social function. It is consistent with user requirements on mapping, and with the needs of models which can conduct more detailed ecosystem service assessments which can guide NBS design. We provide an evidence synthesis based on published literature, which scores the ability of each GI type to deliver a suite of ecosystem services. In the multivariate analysis of the typology scores, the main axis of variation differentiates between constructed (or hybrid) GI types designed primarily for water flow management (delivering relatively few services) and more natural green GI with trees, or blue GI such as lakes and the sea, which deliver a more multi-functional set of regulating services. The most multi-functional GI on this axis also score highest for biodiversity. The second element of variation separates those GI which support very few cultural services and those which score highly in enabling physical wellbeing and social interaction and, to a lesser extent, restoring capacities. Together the typology and multi-functionality matrix provide a much needed assessment for less studied GI types, and allow planners and decision-makers to make a-priori assessments of the relative ability of different GI as part of NBS to address urban challenges.

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