ABSTRACT

Cities and Natural Process is a book for all concerned with the future of our cities, their design and sustainability, and our quality of life within them. Michael Hough describes how economic and technological values have squeezed any real sense of nature out of the modern city, the ways in which this has led to a divisive separation of countryside and city, wasted much of the city's resources, and shaped an urban aesthetic which is sharply at odds with both natural and social processes. Against this is set an alternative history of ecological values informing proven approaches to urban design which work with nature in the city.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|14 pages

Urban ecology: a basis for shaping cities

chapter |7 pages

Diversity

chapter 2|52 pages

Water

chapter |8 pages

Wetlands for stormwater purification

chapter 3|1 pages

Plants and plant communities

chapter |1 pages

Succession

chapter |22 pages

Urban processes Influences

chapter |8 pages

Issues of safety

chapter |1 pages

Changing roles of city spaces

chapter |11 pages

Residential parks and public spaces

chapter 4|1 pages

Wildlife

chapter |2 pages

Natural processes

chapter |2 pages

The cultivated landscape

chapter |3 pages

Problems and conflicts

chapter |21 pages

Wildlife and regenerating waterfronts

chapter 5|7 pages

City farming

chapter |22 pages

Urban food growing by necessity

chapter 6|4 pages

Climate

chapter |4 pages

The urban heat island

chapter |4 pages

Alternative values

chapter |18 pages

Rooftops

chapter |13 pages

Notes

chapter |10 pages

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