Wednesday, February 05, 2014

Brookland resident Daniel Wolkoff: green space development

More passed along by Brookland resident Daniel Wolkoff:



The post below includes images which I did not bother to individually copy and paste here.

Here is an example of  green space development from Hamburg Germany, just what we need in DC. In the middle east they call it Green Fingers and reduce urban heat by 15 degrees in cities.
 
Daniel Goldon Wolkoff
Adams Morgan Stained Glass
1231 Randolph Street, NE
Washington, DC 20017
Tel: 202-232-8391

The Family Fish Farms Network, Inc
717 Lawrence Street, NE
Washington, DC 20017
Web: www.thefamilyfishfarmsnetwork.com
jeromepeloquin@fastmail.fm
(410) 227-0498
“Local Food, When and Where You Want it."
If Hamburg can plan this, why not our elected government, truly Sustainable DC?
Of course Green DC must be Green Justice DC, with truly affordable housing, economic and social justice, no more poverty, living wage employment, full rights to our Returning Citizens!

Kaid Benfield’s Blog

Hamburg's ambitious green network addresses nature, climate resilience, sustainable transportation

Tags:
parkssmartgrowthurbanplanning
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The German city of Hamburg, the 2011 European Green Capital, has announced an ambitious plan to create and link an amazing 27 square miles of new and existing green space all over the city.  The result will be a city that puts nature within easier reach of every resident; becomes more resilient to flooding caused by global warming; and provides enough connectivity for walking and bicycling to become car-optional citywide in twenty years.
Angelika Fritsch, a spokeswoman for the city's department of urban planning and the environment, spoke to reporter Elisabeth Braw of the Guardian:
"[The plan] will connect parks, recreational areas, playgrounds, gardens and cemeteries through green paths.  Other cities, including London, have green rings, but the green network will be unique in covering an area from the outskirts to the city centre.  In 15 to 20 years you'll be able to explore the city exclusively on bike and foot."
In all, the green network will cover an impressive 40 percent of the city’s land area.
  
Although the plan is being hailed as intended to make the city “car-free,” I don’t read the reports quite that way.  Cars will still be allowed in Hamburg, but they may not be necessary for most tasks that able-bodied Hamburgers are likely to undertake.
The more important result may be the provision of green infrastructure to absorb rain and flood waters.  Charley Cameron writes in Inhabitat that in the past 60 years the average temperature of Hamburg, a port city and Germany’s second largest overall, has increased by 9 degrees Celsius, while sea levels have risen by 20 centimeters.  Sea levels are expected to increase another 30 centimeters by 2100, according to Cameron.
If fully realized, the network will cover some 7000 hectares, over half the size of Boston or San Francisco.  In addition to flood and transport benefits, it will connect urban wildlife habitat, help lower summer temperatures, and provide recreational opportunities for residents.
Braw’s article stresses that the plan is still somewhat formative and the brainchild of planners.  Some 30 city staff members have been working on the vision.  For the plan to be successful, politicians will need to “make the green web a priority.”
  
Hamburg is already a city of considerable green ambition.  A head start on the linked network may be provided by a plan to cap a two-mile stretch of a major freeway with woods, parks, trails, and garden plots for city residents.  The green cap, which will also reconnect neighborhoods split by the freeway, will be over 100 feet wide and as much as ten feet thick in places.
Hamburg is the tenth largest city in Europe, with a population of 1.8 million people (4.3 million in the metro area).
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