Posts Tagged ‘Open Space’

America’s Top 10 Green Cities

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

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When you think of a ‘green’ environment, a city is probably the furthest thing from your mind. Noisy, dirty, smelly, over-flowing with trash and smelling of car-fumes, they’re a full-time, 24-hours-a-day, living, breathing eco nightmare. But fortunately these days some cities are making major efforts to clean up their act. They are focusing on clean air and water, renewable energy, promoting the use of public transport, providing parks and greenbelt land, encouraging farmer’s markets and community involvement. It doesn’t happen by accident and requires coherent planning and commitment at a city-wide level. There is no agreed, objective way of measuring which city is ‘greenest’. Different surveys using different criteria will produce different results. What we can say is that these 10 cities, in no particular order of merit, are all doing their best to be greener and making great progress.

Chicago

The Chicago Green Festival

The Chicago Green Festival

(image via: ecorazzi)

Think of Chicago and possibly ‘green’ isn’t the first thing that springs to mind, but with generous open space, public transportation and a commitment to renewable and sustainable energy, the ‘windy city’ earns a mention on many ‘green’ lists. All of the city’s nine museums and the Art Institute have been converted to run partially on solar power and close to one-third the residents use public transportation to get to work. The city aims to buy 20 percent of its electricity from renewable energy sources this year and there are tax incentives available to homeowners who invest in older properties and retrofit them with energy efficient heating and cooling systems, as well as water-saving plumbing. Water quality on the city’s lakefront is rated as excellent which is good news for the many swimmers, boaters and sun bathers who head for the shore in the summer.

Portland

Green Cyclists in Portland

Green Cyclists in Portland

(images via: oregonlive)

Portland’s reputation as the countries ‘greenest’ city is their reward for good planning and hard work. It was the first U.S. city to have a plan to reduce the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, and now 44% of its energy comes from hydroelectric sources and solar power. Cycle lanes and buses help to keep residents out of their cars, with 13% relying on public transportation for their commute to work, 2% bicycling and 11% carpooling. As well as recycling glass, metal and plastics, Portland also composts yard waste and food scraps from businesses. Residents have over 92,000 acres of green space (over 10% of the total city area) to enjoy, ranging from waterfront areas to trails, athletic fields, parks and public gardens.

Boston

Green initiatives in Boston

Green initiatives in Boston

(image via: myninjaplease)

Innovative thinking in Boston has produced plans for a plant that can turn 50,000 tons of grass and leaves into power and fertilizer. The facility would first separate out yard clippings and then bacteria feeding on the grass would make enough methane to power at least 1.5 megawatts’ worth of generators, while heat and agitation would hasten the breakdown of leaves and twigs into compost. They have won numerous awards for their efforts to encourage sustainability and have policies in place to promote green building in private and public developments, clean vehicle and fuel policies for municipal vehicles and greater energy efficiencies for city buildings. There’s no doubt that Boston takes its ‘greeness’ seriously.

Denver

Public Parkland in Beautiful Denver

Public Parkland in Beautiful Denver

(image via: fammed)

This gem nestling in the rockies has ‘green’ smarts as well as picturesque looks. The city is operating under a five-year ’sustainable initiative’ plan that focuses on greenhouse gas reduction, water conservation and quality, waste reduction and increased recycling. As part of this initiative they have three solar installations under consideration and one of the nations largest hybrid municipal fleets. They are building the country’s biggest light rail system, serving the larger metropolitan region and with an anticipated half-million riders daily. With 17 green-certified public buildings and 73 in the process of certification their commitment to ‘greener building’ is clear. Surrounded by natural beauty, with clean water and access to skiing and hiking in the wilderness nearby, Denver is far removed from the smoky, dirty image that so many cities suffer from.

Eugene

Dancing at a Local Market in Eugene

Dancing at a Local Market in Eugene

(image via: eugenesaturdaymarket)

Eugene, nicknamed “The Emerald City” for its lush green setting, is a south Willamette Valley haven between the Cascade and Coast amid Douglas fir forests. It boasts a thriving university and has a reputation for fostering alternative lifestyles and organic products. In the same way as Silicone Valley attracts computer entrepreneurs, Eugene seems to draw green industry and sustainable businesses. Alternative energy in the form of hydroelectric and wind power contribute over 85% of Eugene’s energy needs, reducing greenhouse gas emissions significantly. A generous 15% of Eugene is green space, including athletic fields, city parks, public gardens, trails and waterfront. The city has over 2,500 acres of publicly owned wetlands, and its West Eugene Wetlands Program includes a mitigation bank, a native plant nursery, and protected wetlands.

Oakland

The Oakland Green Jobs Core Initiative

The Oakland Green Jobs Core Initiative

(image via: usgbc-ncc)

With historically high levels of unemployment and poverty, Oakland is now working hard to improve its environment and its opportunities by joining the green economy. It has partnered with neighboring cities, companies and universities to bring green industry to the region. The city has the most watts of solar power among large cities in Northern California, beating green neighbors San Francisco and San José. It gets about 17 percent of its electricity from renewable energy sources, including hydroelectric, biomass, geothermal and wind. The city’s Oil Independent Oakland Task Force, inspired by a national program in Sweden, aims to reduce Oakland’s oil consumption by 40 to 50 percent by 2020. Through the University of Berkeley, Oakland’s city government is studying how it can source 30 percent of its food locally, and the number of farmer’s markets in the city has already doubled. By 2020, its Zero Waste plan aims to reduce the amount of waste by a staggering 90 percent.

Santa Monica

Curbside Recycling in Santa Monica

Curbside Recycling in Santa Monica

(image via: olsen-twins-news)

In just twelve short years, with vision and determination, Santa Monica has turned itself green. Now three of every four of the city’s public works vehicles run on alternative fuel, making it among the largest such fleets in the country. All public buildings use renewable energy and greenhouse gas emissions have been cut by nearly 10 percent. Interestingly, the city carried out a study analyzing the change in its ecological footprint, which tracked its use of the Earth’s resources in terms of water and land area. Results showed its use shrank by 5.7%, since 1990. To put that in perspective, the Earth’s total area of biologically productive land and fresh water sources is finite and must be shared among a growing population of more than 6 billion people. These finite resources provide about 4.5 acres per person but the U.S. average is a grossly disproportionate 24 acres per person. A Santa Monica resident’s ‘footprint’ is now almost 13% smaller than the American average, still way too high but a big improvement.

Madison

Music at Madison's Local Farmer's Market

Music at Madison's Local Farmer's Market

(image via: cdn-write)

The single fact that there are three bikes for every car in Madison speaks volumes for its commitment to a greener environment, that and the more than 100 miles of bike paths. This was the first city in the United States to offer curbside recycling and it gets a gets an impressive 97 percent participation rate, with over 265 tons of material ranging from broken washers to empty beer cans to grass clippings collected each week. A year-round farmer’s market (held indoors in the cold winter months) draws vendors and buyers from throughout the region and consequently organic and local-grown foods are readily available.

San Francisco

San Francisco's Famous Tramcar System

San Francisco's Famous Tramcar System

(image via: richard-seaman)

To its undoubted old-world charm and tourist appeal, the city by the bay has now added impressive green credentials. With bus, subway and ferry services that reach throughout the Bay Area as well as fervent cyclists and devoted car poolers, San Francisco leads the way in getting people out of their cars. In fact, more than half the city’s residents use public or alternative transportation to get to work. Golden Gate Park, the newly-decommissioned Presidio, beaches, extensive bike paths and access to the Pacific and the Bay, all provide the city with an abundance of green space and recreational areas. San Francisco is also a leader in green building, with more than 20 building projects registered for official green certification. City residents are right behind the greening of their environment, voting to allow the city to sell $100 million in revenue bonds to support renewable energy.

Austin

A Texas Cowgirl's Alternative to the SUV

A Texas Cowgirl's Alternative to the SUV

(image via: healinglifestyles)

Think of Texas and, chances are, you get a mental picture of oil-wells and gas-guzzling cars so it may be surprising that Austin is consistently mentioned as one of America’s ‘greenest’ cities. In the wall-to-wall, 200-day-a-year sunshine Austin residents can enjoy its 205 parks, 14 nature preserves, and 25 greenbelts. Ambitious plans are in place to meet 20 percent of its energy needs with renewable energy and energy efficiency by 2020. There are laws protecting the region’s natural watershed from development and a recycling center that dates way back to 1970. Locally grown produce is available from a dozen outdoor farmer’s markets, city buses provide free rides on ‘high ozone’ days and there’s an innovative “pay-as-you-throw” trash collection program that rewards residents for being less wasteful.


US Postal Service Delivers Plan for Huge Green Roof in NYC

Monday, July 27th, 2009
green roof, nyc, usps, us postal service, morgan mail facility,

The US Postal Service can now add another notch to their sustainability belt - a huge green roof on top of their Morgan mail processing facility in NYC. The roof taps in at 2.5 acres of native, drought tolerant vegetation and is one of the largest green roofs in the nation. The seven story facility built in 1933 was originally built for the roof to serve as an extra mail processing location, and because of this was deemed strong enough to support a green roof. The new roof not only serves as a park and open space for employees, but will also save energy for the USPS and reduce stormwater runoff.


Read the rest of US Postal Service Delivers Plan for Huge Green Roof in NYC


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How the U.S. Real Estate Slump Helps, and Hinders Land Conservation

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

Earlier this summer Rand Wentworth, president of the Land Trust Alliance, noted that the open space protected by land trusts in the United States last year exceeded the acreage lost to development. This statistic may be a result of the growth and increasing effectiveness of land conservation organizations across the country, the slumping real estate market or a combination of the two. In either case, those committed to safeguarding our working farms, habitat for endangered species and places of beauty for parks gave a cheer upon hearing the news.

So what effect is the depressed real estate market having on land preservation? The answer is a mixed bag.

First, the good news: Land-conservation organizations are having banner years acquiring properties once considered beyond their budgets. From Hawaii to Florida, developers are selling off prime land at a loss, preferring to make back a portion of their investments now instead of waiting for the crisis to abate – whenever that may occur. One conservation leader has called this a “green lining” ...

Land Protection: More Is More

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

When a developer announced plans to build nearly 1,000 homes across 2,200 acres of open space in a rural Hudson Valley town, I asked the conservation biologist at Scenic Hudson, the group I head, to conduct an ecological study. He concluded the project would so fragment the site’s fragile ecosystems that many of its amphibian and reptile species would be wiped out. Our work supplemented and supported a massive and effective effort by a local grass-roots organization opposing the oversized project on roughly a dozen other grounds -- traffic, cost of school expansion, visual impacts, among others. Shortly after these findings were made public, the developer announced it was going back to the drawing board. It has promised to make protection of the site’s natural resources the beginning point and focus of revised plans. Time will tell whether these plans achieve this laudable goal.

Scan the Web site of any land preservation organization and you’re likely to see the word “contiguous” before you read too far. It’s not enough that we safeguard America’s fields and forests, mountains and marshlands; it’s crucial these open spaces be connected. In other words, it’s far better to conserve one 100-acre plot than to protect 50 unlinked two-acre parcels.

Why? For one thing ...