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Green Infrastructure for Liveable Cities (HORT90039)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 12.5On Campus (Burnley)
About this subject
Contact information
February
Associate Professor Nicholas Williams
Overview
Availability | February |
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Fees | Look up fees |
Green infrastructure is the network of natural and designed vegetation elements within our cities and towns, in both public and private domains. Green infrastructure includes traditional green elements such as urban parks, gardens and trees, as well as newer green roofs, green walls and rain garden technologies. Green infrastructure provides a number of significant economic, social and environmental benefits and is an effective means of helping to adapt our buildings, communities and cities to climate change. In this subject students will gain insights into aspects of policy and planning, design and management of green-infrastructure and how it can improve ecosystem service provision in cities. The use of green infrastructure as ‘living architecture’ and the design considerations involved will be discussed. At the building scale, this will include an understanding of the improved energy efficiencies provided by green infrastructure and their role in building star energy rating systems. At the neighbourhood and landscape scale, the role and function of different green infrastructure technologies and systems will be discussed, including roles in ameliorating urban climates, improving urban water retention, use and quality providing more liveable urban communities for people and wildlife.
Intended learning outcomes
Upon completion of this subject students will be able to:
- Recognise different green infrastructure types and their use to mitigate and adapt to climate change;
- Describe the different roles, functions and application of green infrastructure and related technologies;
- Analyse the design, planning, implementation and management issues relevant to green infrastructure ;
- Describe the principles of water sensitive urban design and filtration media and the potential to reduce peak flows and improve water quality;
- Calculate basic building energy balances and star rating systems; and
- Discuss factors that influence the ‘urban heat island’ and determine the costs and benefits of different green infrastructure systems for energy saving and climate amelioration.
Generic skills
Generic skills obtained during this course will be:
- Climate change adaption issues from the local (building) to macro (city-wide) scale;
- Perspectives of private industry, policy-governance and public for green infrastructure;
- Design considerations for ‘living architecture’ in retro-fitted and new developments;
- Systems understanding of urban landscapes (water, substrate, vegetation, society, energy);
- Cost-benefit analysis of sustainability initiatives; and
- Building star rating systems.
Last updated: 8 November 2024