Abstract

Municipal leaders around the world are demonstrating significant interest in urban greening to realize a range of socioecological benefits. The urban greening toolkit often includes street trees, an essential component of urban design informed by historic legacies of both human and environmental factors. To date, there has been little comparative analysis of street tree density and distribution across international and intercontinental settings, and associated research has not been situated within the broader discussion of historical legacies. This study focuses on five capital cities (Ottawa, Stockholm, Buenos Aires, Paris, and Washington, DC) situated in two climate zones and it addresses two research questions: (1) What are the density and distribution of street trees across a given city and its street hierarchy? and (2) How do these metrics compare within and between cities by climate zone? The analysis draws upon up-to-date datasets from local authorities and includes geospatial analysis of street trees across hierarchical street classes within the central zones of each city. The results show clear differences in street tree density in cities within and between climate zones as well as differences in street tree distribution in cities within the same climate zone. Substantial differences within climate zones further suggest that cultural factors—including but not limited to urban form, aesthetic norms, and governance regimes—may play a pivotal role in the distribution and density of street trees. This illustrates the importance of place-specific cultural and environmental legacies as determinants of street tree density and distribution and supports further comparative research on the topic.

Highlights

  • Urban greening is a common practice around the world today that aims to realize a range of socioecological benefits

  • Through the course of research, up-to-date geospatial street tree and street network datasets were identified and acquired for each city. This type of data may not be available in many cities, in which case the aforementioned method may be appropriate. This comparative assessment of street tree density and distribution reveals substantial variation across five capital cities spanning two climate zones, and these differences can be attributed to place-specific legacy effects

  • The environmental legacy of a city was observed to inform differences in street tree density: Ottawa and Stockholm, located in the cooler climate zone, generally exhibited lower street tree density than Buenos Aires, Paris, and Washington, DC, which are located in warmer climate zones

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Summary

Introduction

Urban greening is a common practice around the world today that aims to realize a range of socioecological benefits. Urban greening activities involve organized or semi-organized efforts to introduce, conserve, and maintain outdoor vegetation in urban areas (Eisenman, 2016; Feng and Tan, 2017). Such efforts take on a multitude of material expressions, municipal policies, and incentives (Beatley, 2017; Tan and Jim, 2017). This includes large-scale urban tree planting initiatives in which street trees figure prominently (Young, 2011; Roman et al, 2015; Breger et al, 2019).

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