ABSTRACT

Rapid changes in land use, especially in growing metropolitan areas, have created problems that increasingly indicate an urgent need for techniques and procedures for making intelligent land-use decisions. This book identifies the potential undesirable effects of land-use changes and provides techniques for estimating and minimizing them. Based on several years of research conducted by a team of thirty-four faculty and assistants, the study shows how planners and decision makers can benefit from such contemporary planning tools as remote sensing, statistical analysis, and computer technology, as well as a variety of evaluation procedures. Part 1 describes the problems of contemporary urbanization and offers a set of planning principles and tools for working with the environmental landscape. These principles and tools are the basis of the procedures detailed in Part 2; the assessment procedures, in turn, are an essential part of the two current planning approaches—the holistic, landscape approach and the parametric approach—described in Part 3.

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction

part 1|72 pages

The Emergence of Landscape Concern and Planning Techniques

chapter 2|35 pages

The Problems of Metropolitanization

chapter 4|18 pages

The Tools of Landscape Planning

part 2|71 pages

Environmental Assessment Procedures

chapter 5|22 pages

Assessment of Landscape Resources

chapter 6|18 pages

Assessment of Landscape Hazards

chapter 7|17 pages

Assessment of Development Suitability

part 3|25 pages

Synthesis

chapter 9|19 pages

Landscape Planning Procedures