Landscape Journal - Summer 2020: Bringing nature into the city

Page 46

F E AT U R E By David Adshead

Hedging our bets: greening the grey in towns and cities The humble hedge has traditionally been sacrificed to the paved front garden but maybe now is the right time for a hedge revival

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bidding war during last December’s General Election in the UK saw each of the main political parties pledge to plant very large numbers of trees.1 Sceptics queried how these ambitions could be realised, particularly given the reduction in government spending on tree planting over the last decade. The track record of independent, charitable organisations is better: The Woodland Trust has planted more than 47m trees since 1972, while The National Forest is close to reaching its target of 9m. Earlier this year The National Trust declared its intention to plant 20m trees in the next ten years; a credible ambition for it owns the land on which this might be done. But other events have since diverted the country’s attention and even the United Nations Climate Change Conference, COP26, to have been hosted in Glasgow in what was heralded as ‘2020 Year of Climate Action’, has been postponed thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic. The planting of trees is a long-established stratagem to counter climate change and an important component in the race to achieve the government’s legally binding target of a net zero carbon economy by 2050. Given the stark statistic that global deforestation currently outstrips afforestation, it is imperative that the UK, one of the

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least forested countries in Europe, sharpens its spade; the world needs to plant simply to stand still. But what else might be done? The recent news that underwater seagrass meadows can capture carbon dioxide (CO2 ) at a rate 35 times faster than that of rainforest trees highlights the need to think laterally and to counter the climate emergency on multiple fronts. So how can towns and cities contribute? While many of them

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benefit from the amenity of green squares, parks and avenue trees, mostly laid out and planted in the 18th and 19th centuries, competition for space severely limits the number and size of trees, particularly forest trees, that can be grown within their bounds. Indeed, health and safety concerns and pressure from the insurance industry, nervous of falling boughs and heaving root systems, have in the last few decades led to the removal of


Articles inside

Jane Findlay

10min
pages 61-64

Adam White

6min
pages 58-60

Climate change resources – nature in the city

4min
pages 56-57

Can COP26 cope with climate and COVID-19?

5min
pages 54-55

Designing the urban microbiome

6min
pages 51-53

Bringing nature into school grounds

6min
pages 48-50

Hedging our bets: greening the grey in towns and cities

5min
pages 46-47

Bringing nature into the twentieth-century city

6min
pages 43-45

Balcony rights and wrongs

10min
pages 39-42

Hamburg – home of the Green Network

6min
pages 36-38

The Catalyst Cube: thinking outside the box

4min
pages 34-35

The transformation of Medellín

8min
pages 31-33

Manifesto for future relations of landscapes

6min
pages 28-30

Bath City Farm – farming for life

9min
pages 22-25

Valuing London’s urban green space in a time of crisis – and in everyday life

5min
pages 20-21

Protecting parks saves lives too

5min
pages 18-19

We have only 30 minutes to save the world

2min
page 18

Reclaiming, reimagining and redefining our streets

2min
page 16

Creating street space out of adversity

3min
page 15

Not all key workers wear scrubs

3min
page 14

Reality check

2min
page 13

Landscape for health and wellbeing

2min
pages 11-12

Landscape architecture studio keeps pace during COVID-19

2min
pages 10-11

Connecting with nature in British Columbia

2min
page 9

The challenges of urban open space in the post-pandemic global south

3min
pages 6-8
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