Updates from the Biodiversity Sensitive Urban Design team @ICON_Science @RMIT_CUR @UniMelb
Follow for inspiring solutions to bring nature back into our cities!
We are excited to share our brand new Biodiversity Sensitive Urban Design webpage!
https://t.co/jwxchHjcjU
It's the go-to place for you to get updates from our team, learn about the different projects we are working on and find lots of #BSUD resources.
📢 New research by colleague Hugh Stanford:
Exploring how cities can unlock the potential of overlooked, informal green spaces!
#urbanism 🌏
#urbanNature#naturebasedsolutions
https://t.co/40lDpobBy2
Overseas, the ‘3-30-300' city planning rule is increasingly seen as critical to human health and wellbeing.
But new research from @RMIT has found Sydney and Melbourne are failing when it comes to one key component - tree cover.
https://t.co/Cwec8eVFo6
Many cities fail the 3-30-300 benchmark for urban nature. The ‘3’ is often met and the ‘300’ is patchy due to poor tree canopy coverage. Cities need better planting conditions and governance to support tree growth @_ficus@TerrEcolGroup@geoconR@sbekessy https://t.co/ywl0dIDMKs
Up now on the ICON blog:
Find out about the new "Nature Pledge for Developers" launched by @sbekessy@Biodivcouncil at the recent Global Nature Positive Summit!
#naturePositive#urbanNature
Will your organisation join others in signing the pledge?
https://t.co/qDZjkFwnhf
Here at the global nature positive summit in Sydney - excited about our Built Environment session coming up soon - hoping for some tangible ways forward for the development industry to embrace nature positive @ICON_Science @RMIT_CUR @Biodivcouncil
Fresh post on the ICON blog
https://t.co/gjRSEPB0VR
The @BioUrbanDesign team with Nature Collective presented their first "Nature Insights" series to a huge range of industry people across the property sector:
One day (soon?) 'everyday nature' will be a basic human right. Read our new paper for the latest on how to rethink design of cities to build everyday nature into the urban fabric
https://t.co/i9O517icVm @Biodivcouncil @RMIT_CUR @GeorgiaGarrard @RewildingOZ @livingbuilding
📢 Our new OA research shows spatially targeting new green spaces to connect bigger patches of habitat can maximise investment for #urbanbiodiversity@_ficus explains it nicely! https://t.co/VUI17IeXIO
🌱🗺️🐝🐦🦗
Paper with @sbekessy @GeorgiaGarrard here: https://t.co/QRcA2ZrKbR
More #urbanEcology to help inform #urbanPlanning - hot off the press today!
📰🌿📢🐝🗺️🌱
Stepping stones for wildlife: how linking up isolated habitats can help nature thrive in our cities
https://t.co/pIbkaeb5oO via @ConversationEDU with @_ficus
The tangle of greenery along railway lines, flowers growing on vacant lots, or unmown grassy patches under power lines, it turns out people in cities engage with nature in all these spaces, write researchers from @RMIT.
https://t.co/a41jIdoeM2
📢 OA #urbanNature research by @HughStanford1 hot off the press!
With @HurleyJoe @GeorgiaGarrard
we use #citsci data to explore where people are connecting with nature in informal green spaces across Melbourne - it's surprisingly often! Read more here:
https://t.co/kgEFGBpxi6
While all trees can have some benefits, many of the benefits of nature in cities are linked to biodiversity — not just greenery. Read more from: @Biodivcouncil's @sbekessy from @ICON_Science@RMIT
https://t.co/SpDckAix3b
For World Biodiversity Day, 360info ran this short article of mine. Let's not miss the chance to bring nature back while greening our cities
https://t.co/Ewrd9u7mul @Biodivcouncil@ICON_Science @RMIT_CUR @BushHeritageAus @RewildingOZ @LivingFutures