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Conversion, coordination and care: Unpacking housing-featured urban renaturing in Taichung

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The shift toward green and sustainable economies has led to the integration of ecological goals into land development strategies, resulting in diverse urban renaturing practices. These practices are often embedded within property-driven development processes, yet the co-productive relationship between urban greening and housing has remained under-theorized. Rather than treating greening and development as sequential stages, this study examines how they are operationalized in tandem, often reinforcing subtle forms of exclusion not captured by conventional analyses of displacement or gentrification. Drawing on the lens of urban political ecology (UPE), we develop the concept of metabolic greening to unpack a housing-featured renaturing apparatus. Based on a case study of the Unit Two land readjustment district in Taichung City, Taiwan, we analyze how greening practices and housing development are co-produced through iterative and interlocking processes. The research design integrates semi-structured interviews, policy and document analysis, and field observation to investigate the dynamics under study. We developed the 3Cs framework—conversion, coordination, and care—to serve two key purposes: to explain how housing-featured urban greening is organized, and to critically examine the exclusionary effects embedded in these processes. By repositioning greening as an integral part of property redevelopment, the framework advances a more relational understanding of urban nature production. The findings contribute to UPE debates by offering conceptual tools to examine how ecological interventions are not only organized through property but also implicated in shaping differentiated access, right, and control over urban green space.

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This paper use the advanced experience of Japan in the area of disaster prevention green space planning and construction and, look at the status, gaps and challenges of China's construction and planning of Green Infrastructure, present the new thinking direction about the construction of disaster prevention green space combine with Green Infrastructure.Taking the construction of the disaster prevention green infrastructure network planning of Majiagou River in Harbin as an example and put forward related strategies.

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Urban greening is increasingly promoted as a response to environmental pressures, yet its capacity to improve air quality in arid cities remains uncertain. This study examines the relationship between urban green spaces (UGSs) and air pollution in Dubai using eight years of monitoring data from 14 stations combined with satellite-derived vegetation mapping. Results show that while vegetation expansion modestly coincides with declining nitrogen dioxide (NO₂) levels, particulate matter (PM₂.₅ and PM₁₀) concentrations remain persistently high and well above World Health Organization guidelines. More critically, spatial analysis reveals a mismatch. UGSs are concentrated in large recreational parks and low-exposure zones, whereas high-density residential and traffic corridors, where pollution burdens are greatest, are underserved. These findings underscore the limits of UGSs as a uniform intervention for pollution mitigation. In Dubai, greening has been shaped more by aesthetic and prestige-driven agendas than by public health priorities, reflecting wider debates in urban political ecology about symbolic versus substantive environmental action. The study contributes theoretically by highlighting the context dependency of UGSs, methodologically by integrating long-term air quality and GIS analysis, and practically by calling for equity-driven, data-informed greening strategies in arid cities.

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Accurate retrieval of Land Surface Temperature (LST) is critical for assessing the cooling effects of urban green spaces (UGS) and blue spaces (UBS), which help mitigate the urban heat island effect and improve thermal comfort. This study introduces a novel methodology that integrates deep learning with domain expertise to predict LST, using real LST data, vegetation spectral indices, and spectral bands as inputs. A 1-Dimensional Convolutional Neural Network (1D-CNN) was developed, which outperformed conventional machine learning and alternative deep learning models, demonstrating high predictive accuracy and strong generalization ability. Spatial regression analyses were further employed to examine how UGS of varying sizes influence LST. Results revealed that larger UGS provide strong cooling benefits, while smaller patches contribute less. Remote sensing data from 1991 to 2022 confirmed the significant role of both green and blue spaces in mitigating urban heat, with notable cooling observed around wetlands, rivers, and urban parks. Importantly, combined green–blue configurations enhanced cooling more effectively than blue spaces alone, indicating synergistic benefits when vegetation is integrated with water bodies. Case analysis of afforestation in Daan Forest Park demonstrated how urban greening initiatives can substantially lower local temperatures. Similarly, UBS surrounded by adjacent vegetation exhibited greater temperature reductions compared to isolated water bodies. These findings underscore the need to preserve and expand large, continuous green areas while enhancing connections between green and blue infrastructures. The proposed framework provides robust evidence and practical guidance for urban planners and policymakers to design climate-resilient cities that maximize the co-benefits of UGS and UBS. Analyzing the spatiotemporally varying effects of UGS using time series Landsat data There is an increase in small UGS patches alongside a decline in large UGS areas A novel method was developed to accurately quantify blue spaces cooling temperatures Larger UGS and integrating UGS with Blue space offer significant cooling benefits The combined effect of blue-green interaction leads to an increase in cooling effect

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<p>The smart and sustainable city idea gained momentum in recent years in order to cope with population growth in urban areas and to make the city live. Cities are projected to consume 70% of the world's resources and 66% of the world population by 2050. Most of tier-3 and tier-2 cities will convert to tier-1 city, and we need to identify and protect the urban green spaces. Urban green areas have many esthetic advantages, including environmental benefits such as a fall in city temperature in the summer and absorption of rainwater. Social advantages are such as feelings of happiness and peace. Objective quantification of greenery on its neighbourhood spatial distribution may help identify essential and potential areas. Heterogeneous land uses describe urban areas. Urban heat island (UHI), with high Land surface temperatures (LST), is distinguished by its city development pattern, socioeconomic and anthropogenic activities. The LST is rising rapidly not only in cities but also in tier-3 & tier-2 cities.  Urban green areas, including parks, playgrounds, gardens and areas, such as ponds, pools, lakes and rivers, will contribute to the control of land temperatures in and around the city. Such spaces also lead to the formation of the Urban Cooling Island (UCI), where temperatures are comparatively cooler than surrounding temperatures, because of their shade of the trees and their evapotranspiration. This cooling island formation is referred to as the Park Cooling Island (PCI) impact. The present work aims to describe the effect of urban green and urban blue spaces on LST using a range of data sources with geospatial technologies. Udupi town, which comes under Udupi district, Karnataka, India is a tier-3 city, selected for the present research work. The data used in the study include Landsat 8 temporal satellite images and secondary data, such as field data from various government and semi-government organisations. LST has been measured using the emissivity reference channel algorithm from Landsat 8 thermal bands. Different indices such as Normalized Difference Built-up Index (NDBI), Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), Normalized Difference Water Index NDWI, Land Shape Index (LSI) are determined from images from Landsat 8. The results show that LST exists with high spatial variability and urban green, blue spaces have a stronger influence on LST.</p>

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Cities worldwide are taking action to increase the amount and quality of urban green spaces. However, not all efforts for the greening of cities produce just and inclusive outcomes. For more inclusive urban greening processes, scholars have proposed incentivizing residents’ participation in planning and implementing green initiatives that promote creating and maintaining green spaces. However, further in-depth analysis of the connection between implementing new urban green spaces and environmental (in)justice is needed to understand how unjust outcomes might emerge due to policies aiming to promote the uptake of urban green through citizen engagement. To investigate the justice implications of policies that aim to create new urban green spaces through citizen participation, this article combines GIS analysis and qualitative analysis of 26 semi-structured interviews to evaluate the process and outcomes of the Green Agenda policy in Amsterdam. The Green Agenda (Agenda Groen) is a municipal policy supporting citizens’ initiatives to uptake urban green. Through the analysis of this case study, the article aims to identify factors that create barriers to achieving just outcomes during the implementation of policies for urban greening. Results indicate that although the approach has successfully increased the amount of urban green in Amsterdam, the presence of barriers that impede procedural justice and lack of recognition made the urban greening process less just. The three underlying factors that create barriers in Amsterdam are the centralization of the government, the lack of support for local organizations, and the effect of socioeconomic characteristics on inclusion and participation. The article concludes by discussing the synergies and tradeoffs between identified barriers and suggesting solutions to be integrated into future policies for more successful and just greening processes.

  • Research Article
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The politics of greening unceded lands in the settler city
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  • Australian Geographer
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Urban greening is a buzz term in urban policy and research settings in Australia and elsewhere. In a context of settler colonial urbanism, like Australia, a first fact becomes clear: urban greening is always being practiced on unceded Indigenous lands. Recognising this requires some honest reckoning with how this latest urban policy response perpetuates dispossessory settler-colonial structures. In this paper, we listen to the place-based ontologies of the peoples and lands from where we write to inform understanding the city as an always already Indigenous place – a sovereign Aboriginal City. In so doing, the paper tries to practice a way of creating more truthful and response-able urban knowledge practices. We analyse three distinct areas of scholarly research that are present in the contemporary literature: urban greening and green infrastructure; urban political ecology; and more-than-human cities. When placed in relationship of learning with the sovereign Aboriginal City, our analysis finds that these scholarly domains of urban greening work to re-organise colonial power relations. The paper considers what work the practice and scholarship of ‘urban greening’ might need to do in order to become response-able and learn to learn with Indigenous sovereignties and ontologies.

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Embracing green spaces: Exploring spatiotemporal changes in urban green space accessibility and its equity in Guangzhou, China for sustainable urban greening
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Embracing green spaces: Exploring spatiotemporal changes in urban green space accessibility and its equity in Guangzhou, China for sustainable urban greening

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