Adapting Street Profile Design by Using Nature-Based Solutions in New Neighbourhoods and the Retrofit of Buildings †
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Issues
1.2. Purpose and Relevance
1.3. Literature Review
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. New European Bauhaus
2.2. The Oppla.eu Portal
2.3. Research by Design
- Historical context: Is the green element a historical green infrastructure (1A) or is it a new one (1B)?
- Urban context: Is it an individual piece of greenery (2A) or is it part of a green network/a linking corridor (2B)?
- Nature vs. Design: Is this spontaneous vegetation (3A) or planned vegetation (3B)?
- Use: Is it already adopted in full-scale use (4A) or is it a part of new NbS demonstrative pilots (4B)?
- Climate Context: Is the design element specific to a certain climatic zone (5A) or is it able to contribute to climate adaptation and resilience in all climatic zones analysed (5B)?
2.4. Climatic Zones
2.4.1. Bucharest
2.4.2. Lisbon
2.4.3. Vienna
2.4.4. Rome
2.5. Hazards
2.6. Air Pollution
3. Results
3.1. Bucharest
3.1.1. Design Solution in Bucharest
3.1.2. Design Solution in Măgurele
3.2. Lisbon
3.3. Vienna
3.4. Rome
- The EUR 42 (Esposizione Universale di Roma 1942) district. This is already mapped above in Figure 8, it is a modernist site of a more monumentalist manner, but enveloped in large green spaces.
- Appia Antica Regional Park. Appia Antica is the area of a famous ancient Roman archaeological site road, encompassing larger neighbourhoods, for example, wider fields of poppies.
- Acilia and the Dragona Loop, close to Ostia Antica, the antique port of Rome.
- The Landscape Context of Ostia Antica. This is the former port of ancient Rome and now an archaeological site; the landscape of archaeological sites was the subject of subsequent Le Notre Forums, for example, in Paphos.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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City | Temperature °C Min Winter, Max Summer | Air Pollution—2023 Average Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5) Concentrations in Capital Cities in Europe in Micrograms per Cubic Meter of Air µg/m3 (UE Ranking) |
---|---|---|
Bucharest | Average 11 °C −10 °C min winter, +40 °C max summer | Average 15.8 µg/m3 (56 EU) |
Lisbon | Average 20 °C −8 °C min winter, +30 °C max summer | Average 17.6 µg/m3 (98 EU) |
Vienna | Average 10–11 °C −1 °C min winter, +27 °C max summer | Average 9.1 µg/m3 (91 EU) |
Rome | Average 20 °C −4 °C min winter, +40 °C max summer | Average 13.1 µg/m3 (69 EU) |
Măgurele | Average 19 °C −10 °C min winter, +40 °C max summer | Average 8 µg/m3 |
NbS Analysed | Historical Context | Urban Context | Nature vs. Design | Use | Climate Context |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Green walls (including demonstrations at fairs and on campus, in pots) | 1B | 2A | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Climbing green plants (on historic houses/interwar houses in Mediterranean style and fences) | 1A | 2A | 3A | 4A | 5B |
Magnolia trees | 1A | 2A | 3A | 4A | 5B |
Cherry trees, in one botanical garden; in the other, an Italian garden | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Gardens of individual houses | 1A | 2A | 3A | 4A | 5B |
Climbing flowers (glycine) | 1A | 2A | 3A | 4A | 5B |
Lotus on lakes | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Green roof | 1B | 2A | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Lichen | 1B | 2A | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Parks featuring fruit trees | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Flower tree street instead of green street | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Cemeteries | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Bucharest overview | 9x1A vs. 3x1B | 7x2A vs. 5x2B | 4x3A vs. 8x3B | 9x4A vs. 3x4B | 0x5A vs. 12x5B |
Historical Context | Urban Context | Nature vs. Design | Use | Climate Context | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Proposed NbS or NbS connected to the Magurele project | ROLE IN PROPOSAL | Is the green element a historical green infrastructure (1A) or is it a new one (1B)? | Is it an individual piece of greenery (2A) or is it part of a green network/a linking corridor (2B)? | Is it spontaneous vegetation (3A) or planned vegetation (3B)? | Is it already adopted in full-scale use (4A) or is it a part of new NbS demonstrative pilot (4B)? | Is the design element specific to a certain climatic zone (5A) or is it able to contribute to climate adaptation and resilience in all climatic zones analysed (5B)? |
Clear open-air ground level, including partial vegetation along circulation | - Tools for reducing the urban heat island effect with implications for energy savings in operation and comfort in the outdoor space: with better air circulation, better natural ventilation occurs and the street receives even more direct sunlight. Using the same principle, we also propose raising the ground floors, below which a naturally ventilated walking level ventilates bicycle-parking or bicycle exchange services and access to the upper parts of the buildings. | 1B | 2A/2B | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Intermediate upper-level gardens, inside the buildings, both open-air and enclosed gardens, both vertical and horizontal | - For interaction between building users, as a mini vertical park; - For the insertion of sensors for measuring climate indicators; - For phytoremediation for grey water. | 1B | 2A/2B | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Vertical walls including vertical gardens, flowering gardens and urban farming | - For vertical gardens and urban agriculture (vertical farms) as an efficient use of land and for urban beekeeping; - Rainwater collection through facade elements; - The insertion of sensors for measuring climate indicators; - Cascades from the facade to the ground floor with hidden cleaning systems (decanters, filters, sensors). | 1B | 2A/2B | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Rooftop gardens, green roofs, rooftop farming | - Green roofs and terraces intertwined with solar heating and photovoltaic panels; - The insertion of sensors for measuring climate indicators and vegetation health. | 1B | 2A/2B | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Urban public connectors and parks | - Ground shading; - Decreasing UHI effects; - Rain water retention; - Visual aesthetics; - Mental and physical health. | 1A | 2A | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Măgurele NbSs proposal overview | 1x1A vs. 4x1B | 1x2A vs. 4x2A/2B | 0x3A vs. 5x3B | 1x4A vs. 4x4B | 0x5A vs. 5x5B |
NbS Analysed | Historical Context | Urban Context | Nature vs. Design | Use | Climate Context |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Green street | 1B | 2B | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Genuine green wall (on geotextile) interior/exterior | 1B | 2A | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Elevated roof garden as half-closed courtyard (on historic building/interwar building) | 1B | 2A | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Green interiors at Honest greens chain | 1B | 2A | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Green fences (pots) | 1B | 2A | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Miradouro | 1A | 2A | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Palace gardens in surrounding localities(Sintra, Mafra, Queluz) | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Botanical gardens (>4) | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Cemeteries | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Lisbon overview | 4x1A vs. 5x1B | 4x2A vs. 5x2B | 0x3A vs. 9x3B | 4x4A vs. 5x4B | 0x5A vs. 9x5B |
NbS Analysed | Historical Context | Urban Context | Nature vs. Design | Use | Climate Context |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Green street | 1B | 2B | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Cherry trees | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Green belt | 1A | 2B | 3A | 4A | 5B |
Green walls on geotextile | 1B | 2A | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Elevated garden (Hundertwasser) | 1B | 2A | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Climbing plants on historic building (interwar) | 1A | 2A | 3A | 4A | 5B |
Green walls (in pots) | 1B | 2A | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Adopt a tree | 1B | 2A | 3B | 4A | 5B |
ECOLOPES Project [16] | 1B | 2A | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Island on the river | 1A | 2B | 3A | 4A | 5B |
Parks resulting from garden expo | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4B | 5B |
Gardens of interwar buildings and respective archive | 1A | 2A | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Palace gardens | 1A | 2A | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Cemeteries | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Heuriger (Wine production in the urban green belt) | 1A | 2B | 3A | 4A | 5B |
Vienna overview | 9x1A vs. 6x1B | 8x2A vs. 7x2B | 4x3A vs. 11x3B | 9x4A vs.6x4B | 0x5A vs. 15x5B |
NbS Analysed | Historical Context | Urban Context | Nature vs. Design | Use | Climate Context |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Climbing flowers (glycine and bougainvillaea—typical for the Mediterranean) | 1A | 2A | 3A | 4A | 5A |
Cherry trees in interwar neighbourhood park | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Mediterranean trees | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5A |
Antique sites | 1A | 2A | 3A | 4A | 5B |
Italian gardens of (interwar) villas | 1A | 2A | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Gardens of diplomacy villas | 1A | 2A | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Gardens of ministates (Cavalieri di Malta, Vatican) | 1A | 2A | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Flower market | 1A | 2A | 3A | 4A | 5B |
Cemeteries | 1A | 2B | 3B | 4A | 5B |
Island on the river | 1A | 2B | 3A | 4A | 5B |
Poppies on Via Appia | 1A | 2B | 3A | 4A | 5B |
Rome overview | 11x1A vs. 0x1B | 6x2A vs. 5x2B | 5x3A vs. 6x3B | 11x4A vs. 0x4B | 2x5A vs. 9x5B |
City | Historical Context | Urban Context | Nature vs. Design | Use | Urban Context |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Is the green element a historical green infrastructure (1A) or is it a new one (1B)? | Is it an individual piece of greenery (2A) or is it part of a green network/a linking corridor (2B)? | Is this spontaneous vegetation (3A) or planned vegetation (3B)? | Is it already adopted in full-scale use (4A) or is it a part of new NbS demonstrative pilots (4B)? | Is the design element specific to a certain climatic zone (5A) or is it able to contribute to climate adaptation and resilience in all climatic zones analysed (5B)? | |
Bucharest | 9x1A vs. 3x1B increased historical green elements, possible indicator of low novel NbS adoption | 7x2A vs. 5x2B an equal distribution of each kind | 4x3A vs. 8x3B mostly planned vegetation, which, when connected to the historical point, hints to historical planned corridors | 9x4A vs. 3x4B low degree of new demonstrative pilots | 0x5A vs. 12x5B all NbSs present in the city that were analysed can be used in all climatic zones studied |
Lisbon | 4x1A vs. 5x1B new green elements add to the existing infrastructure | 4x2A vs. 5x2B mostly interconnected | 0x3A vs. 9x3B almost no spontaneous vegetation that suggests the green infrastructure is a clear part of the urban planning process | 4x4A vs. 5x4B new experimental NbSs are showcased throughout the city | 0x5A vs. 9x5B all NbSs present in the city that were analysed can be used in all climatic zones studied |
Vienna | 9x1A vs. 6x1B still more historical elements but there are already a number of new green insertions | 8x2A vs. 7x2B an almost equal distribution of each kind | 4x3A vs. 11x3B mostly planned vegetation, which, when connected to the historical point, hints to historical planned corridors | 9x4A vs.6x4B medium degree of new demonstrative pilots, but overtaken by the existing full-scale green solutions. | 0x5A vs. 15x5B all NbSs present in the city that were analysed can be used in all climatic zones studied |
Rome | 11x1A vs. 0x1B all historical green elements, perhaps due to the immense built heritage layers | 6x2A vs. 5x2B an equal distribution of each kind | 5x3A vs. 6x3B planned vegetation are showcased better than spontaneous spots | 11x4A vs. 0x4B no new experimental NbSs, also perhaps due to the immense built heritage layers | 2x5A vs. 9x5B almost all NbSs present in the city that were analysed can be used in all climatic zones studied. Those that are specific may have flora counterparts in the other zones (e.g., climbing plants) |
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Ibric, A.; Bostenaru Dan, M.; Crăciun, C. Adapting Street Profile Design by Using Nature-Based Solutions in New Neighbourhoods and the Retrofit of Buildings. Buildings 2024, 14, 1920. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14071920
Ibric A, Bostenaru Dan M, Crăciun C. Adapting Street Profile Design by Using Nature-Based Solutions in New Neighbourhoods and the Retrofit of Buildings. Buildings. 2024; 14(7):1920. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14071920
Chicago/Turabian StyleIbric, Adrian, Maria Bostenaru Dan, and Cerasella Crăciun. 2024. "Adapting Street Profile Design by Using Nature-Based Solutions in New Neighbourhoods and the Retrofit of Buildings" Buildings 14, no. 7: 1920. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14071920
APA StyleIbric, A., Bostenaru Dan, M., & Crăciun, C. (2024). Adapting Street Profile Design by Using Nature-Based Solutions in New Neighbourhoods and the Retrofit of Buildings. Buildings, 14(7), 1920. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14071920