REWILDING URBAN AREAS TO MAINTAIN ECOSYSTEM SERVICES AND ECOLOGICAL TOURISM: THE CASE OF SALER’S DEVESA, VALÈNCIA, SPAIN

The Saler’s Devesa is a case of a failed tourist project to urbanize a historical protected forest inside the metropolitan area of València in Spain. In the 1970s, the government started actions to urbanize this area. In fact, all the public works and some buildings were built. However, in the 1980s...

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Veröffentlicht in:WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment 2020-01, Vol.248, p.177
Hauptverfasser: JOSÉ LUIS MIRALLES I GARCIA, FELIPE MARTÍNEZ LLORENS
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Saler’s Devesa is a case of a failed tourist project to urbanize a historical protected forest inside the metropolitan area of València in Spain. In the 1970s, the government started actions to urbanize this area. In fact, all the public works and some buildings were built. However, in the 1980s the new democratic government decided to rewild the area and “deconstruct” the urban development works that had already been built. The case allows knowing the process of rewilding and the difficulties to do it. On the other hand, currently in developed countries, metropolitan areas simultaneously present a stabilized population and a great surface extension. In this situation, the sustainability of these urban areas has focused on managing the city already consolidated by renovation or regeneration processes and rewilding open spaces, developing green infrastructures. Because of this, we focused our attention on researching one of the few cases that exists on rewilding urban areas. The green infrastructure concept has been used in the case of La Devesa to maintain and increase ecosystem services. In addition, these actions allow promotion of ecological tourism inside the area. The research question is “What should be the idea of society’s progress when touristic urban development growth is no longer possible or desirable?” The article analyses the historical process of rewilding and rethinking the idea of progress in the current situation.
ISSN:1746-448X
1743-3541
DOI:10.2495/ST200151