#green-infrastructure

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fromFast Company
2 days ago

These basketball courts double as a hidden flood defense

They look like ordinary basketball courts. But two new courts built next to public housing in New York City double as flood prevention. In a sudden flash flood-when the city's aging sewer system can easily become overwhelmed and streets can fill with water-the sunken basketball courts act like retention basins. The design can hold as much as 330,000 gallons, with the court's lowest areas filling like a pool and additional water stored in bioretention cells beneath the surface.
Environment
US news
fromPortland Mercury
4 days ago

Good Morning, News: Atmospheric River Underway, Beaverton Students Walk Out To Protest ICE, and Trump Is Trying To Buy Love From the Farmers He's Screwing Over

Portland will see heavy rain and high winds from an atmospheric river, raising flood risk while highlighting the need for green infrastructure and drain clearing.
Environment
fromNature
1 week ago

Cities are embracing nature for flood defence

Preserving upstream open space in North Coyote Valley can reduce urban flood risk by maintaining permeable land that absorbs stormwater and prevents costly downstream flooding.
Real estate
fromArchDaily
1 week ago

UNS Designs a 10-Minute Walkable City Master Plan for Multigenerational Living in Seoul, South Korea

SeoulOne is a 405,000 m² car-free, multigenerational mixed-use neighborhood in Seoul prioritizing green space, walkability, and sustainability.
Environment
fromArchDaily
3 weeks ago

The Temperature of Inequality: Rethinking Urban Surfaces for a Changing Climate

Lower-income neighborhoods experience extreme urban heat—15–20°F hotter—raising energy use, health risks, and reflecting spatial climate inequality.
fromThesanjoseblog
1 month ago

Facchino Neighborhood Breaks Ground for Vibrant Housing Near Berryessa BART

Facchino Neighborhood broke ground on Oct 20th in Berryessa, which will transform a 13-acre industrial site at 1655 Berryessa Road into over 700 residential units. Property owner Bob Facchino personally operated an excavator to begin demolishing the building that once housed his family's trucking business for more than 50 years, calling the moment bittersweet yet necessary for progress. This redevelopment, near the Berryessa BART station that opened in 2020, aligns with plans for an urban village that integrates housing with transit accessibility.
Real estate
Environment
fromianVisits
1 month ago

Large cycle hub for 650 bikes opens at Richmond Station

Richmond Station has a new multi-storey cycle hub with 650 spaces, solar power, a living green wall, rainwater harvesting, 24-hour CCTV, and managed storage.
fromFast Company
1 month ago

In Toronto, a polluted industrial wasteland is now a beautiful park

"It's incredibly transformed," says Emily Mueller De Celis, a landscape architect at the firm Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, which won a competition to "renaturalize" the area in 2007. "Rather than walking around in and amongst oil refineries and other industry, now you are immersed in nature, walking along the banks of a river with spectacular views back to the city."
Miscellaneous
Environment
fromThe Cool Down
2 months ago

Residents share video after building brilliant solution to neighborhood stormwater issue: 'Such an important purpose'

Brooklyn's Canarsie installed rain gardens and infiltration basins to capture stormwater, but maintenance and anti-litter efforts are needed to prevent flooding.
Environment
fromArchDaily
2 months ago

Pazhou South Waterfront Park / SWA Group

A 4-hectare, 300-meter waterfront park restores Pazhou’s riverfront, connecting green infrastructure, transit, residences, and ecological corridors to mitigate urban heat in Guangzhou's CBD.
Design
fromArchitectural Digest
2 months ago

Are Our Cities Sparking Enough Joy?

Design building exteriors and public urban spaces to prioritize joy, greenery, and human-focused features to improve mental and physical well-being.
fromState of the Planet
2 months ago

Exploring Essential Ecosystems for a Thriving Urban Future

The Bronx River was once heavily altered by industrial activity and has been the subject of significant restoration efforts to improve its ecological health and connectivity. One major project is the construction of a fish passage at the East 182nd Street Dam, which aims to improve aquatic species migration and enhance the ecological functioning of the river. By facilitating the movement of fish that had previously been blocked by the dam, this project would promote a healthier aquatic ecosystem.
Environment
fromCity Limits
3 months ago

Thriving Natural Areas Help Keep NYC Sewers from Overflowing, Report Finds

When it rains, New York City's natural areas-made up of forests, wetlands, and grasslands-play a crucial role in keeping sewers from overflowing by soaking up 17 percent of the city's stormwater, a new report by the Natural Areas Conservancy (NAC) finds. The report reveals that this natural landscape, which makes up a third of the Big Apple's more than 30,000 acres of parkland, soaks up twice the amount of storm water on a per unit basis when compared to other forms of green infrastructure like rain gardens.
Environment
Design
fromwww.archdaily.com
3 months ago

Campus LIDL France / Atelier M3 architectes

New urban campus integrates architecture, landscape, and urban life with a central landscaped core, accessible plazas, abundant vegetation, and enhanced green and blue infrastructure.
Design
fromArchDaily
3 months ago

A-fact Wins International Competition for Podgorica's Museum and Cultural Park in Montenegro

Podgorica will gain a Museum District uniting three institutions along the reconnected Morača River with parkland, green roofs, stone-clad sculptural volumes, and shared cultural spaces.
fromwww.newsshopper.co.uk
4 months ago

Have your say on plans to make Greenwich streets safer and more sustainable

The Royal Borough of Greenwich council aims to make streets greener, safer, and more sustainable by introducing car club facilities, cycle storage, and electric vehicle charging points.
Environment
Environment
fromsilive
5 months ago

Green infrastructure coming to Staten Island Zoo lot: What visitors should know

A $1.9 million infrastructure project will close part of the Staten Island Zoo's parking lot to enhance stormwater management.
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