Soil and Water as Resources: How Landscape Architecture Reclaims Hydric Contaminated Soil for Public Uses in Urban Settlements

Soil is one of the fundamental components for life on Earth, but today, as a consequence of humans' unsustainable actions, soil is polluted, distressed and spoiled. In contemporary practice design, we recognize the importance of the soil quality to structure new discourses in landscape practice...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2020-11, Vol.12 (21), p.8840, Article 8840
Hauptverfasser: Cortesi, Isotta, Ferretti, Laura Valeria, Morgia, Federica
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Ferretti, Laura Valeria
Morgia, Federica
description Soil is one of the fundamental components for life on Earth, but today, as a consequence of humans' unsustainable actions, soil is polluted, distressed and spoiled. In contemporary practice design, we recognize the importance of the soil quality to structure new discourses in landscape practice. The central role in this process is undoubtedly played by the value a healthy soil has for the community and for the environment. The strategic design of wet and hydric landscapes is certainly an essential aspect for the regular and exceptional management of the effects produced by pollution and climate change. The research develops the soil as a key subject in the landscape design, specifically in hydric environments where water represents an important factor. The essay is divided into three parts: resources and opportunities of disturbed wet soil, successfully built public space where soil remediation transformed heavy polluted industrial urban sites in fertile public ecosystems within the dense urban structures, and soil design as a domain of urban resilience. The landscape project as an integrated project has spread the seeds of a new approach to the consideration of the contemporary city in an ecological manner.
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subjects Cities
Climate change
Climate effects
Culture
Ecology
Ecosystems
Environmental ethics
Environmental Sciences
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
Environmental Studies
Floods
Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
Industrial pollution
Landfill
Landscape architecture
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Nature
Pollution effects
Public spaces
Science & Technology
Science & Technology - Other Topics
Sediment pollution
Seeds
Settling
Soil contamination
Soil pollution
Soil quality
Soil remediation
Soil settlement
Soil structure
Soil water
Storm damage
Taxonomy
Urban areas
Urban structures
Water shortages
title Soil and Water as Resources: How Landscape Architecture Reclaims Hydric Contaminated Soil for Public Uses in Urban Settlements
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