Como hoje se fazem e não se fazem jardins. Em Lisboa:


PALESTRA

Por um Quadrado Verde!
Espaço Rural ou Parque Urbano?
Um Caso de Estudo em Telheiras.

Ana Contumélias
(Socióloga, ex-dirigente da Associação de Residentes de Telheiras)


HOJE às 18h Auditório 1 (Torre B, 1º Piso)

CICLO DE PALESTRAS
'A ARQUITECTURA E O ORDENAMENTO DO TERRITÓRIO'
Organização da Comissão Pedagógica do Departamento de Sociologia Faculdade de
Ciências Sociais e Humanas/Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Av. de Berna, 26C
SOCIOLOGIA DA NOVA 30 ANOS

Link - Página eventos na Un. Nova - FCSH
do novo Virtual (íssimo) Earth - foto olho de pássaro de Telheiras

Como hoje se fazem jardins. Nos EUA:


Plano do Parque Floyds Fork publicado terça-feira

Floyds Fork park development plan to be released Tuesday
Park designers to release ideas for development

By Marcus Green magreen@courier-journal.com The Courier-Journal



Along the banks of Floyds Fork in eastern Jefferson County, sports fields gradually give way to open meadows. Hiking trails curve along the water.
Further south, there are rugged vistas overlooking the creek and a string of parks offering playgrounds, picnic areas and a great lawn.
That's how designers see the Floyds Fork parks project developing over the years.
The public will get an opportunity to see that vision this week, reviewing an initial plan for new roads, trails, parks and swaths of rugged woods.
The plan lays out two massive parks, one between Shelbyville Road and Floyds Fork Park and another from Seatonville Road to Bardstown Road.
It also maps four major entry points -- each comparable to the Daniel Boone statue that serves as a distinct gateway to Cherokee Park, said Dan Jones, chairman of 21st Century Parks, the nonprofit group overseeing the project with Metro Parks and the Future Fund land trust.
Project leaders say they'll use feedback from neighbors, outdoor enthusiasts and citizens to finalize -- perhaps by mid-June -- the master plan drafted by the Philadelphia design firm Wallace Roberts & Todd.
Jones said the plan "provides choice and flexibility."
It will be released during an open house from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at Christian Academy, 700 S. English Station Road.
The string of parks, open space and trails would run about 27 miles along Floyds Fork, mostly following the creek.
21st Century Parks, which Jones founded with his father, Humana co-founder David A. Jones, would manage privately owned land, while Metro Parks is to retain control over nearly 700 acres of public parks.
In response to concerns over a previous plan to give 21st Century Parks control over the public land, Metro Parks is helping to draft an ordinance that would keep the city's ownership of existing parks.
The privately owned land would be preserved forever as parkland primarily through deed restrictions, Jones said.
Chad Carlton, a spokesman for Mayor Jerry Abramson, said he expects the Metro Council will receive the measure in the next few weeks.
Abramson said the parks plan emphasizes the natural landscape in the Floyds Fork corridor.
"It's truly an exceptional design that will put Louisville in the top of the tier for parks and park design throughout the country," he said.

Preliminary master plan

The master plan accounts for nearly 3,200 acres -- more than twice the size of Cherokee, Iroquois and Shawnee parks combined.
It doesn't address another 800 acres that would link the northern and southern sections because land there hasn't been acquired, Jones said.
"We're working on it, but we're not there yet," he said.
In recent weeks, 21st Century Parks has started discussing the project with outdoor groups and residents of eastern Jefferson County.
"It's a fantastic plan," said Jim Ball, co-owner of Louisville's The Trail Store and Mountain Bike Depot, who attended last Monday's meeting in Jeffersontown.
For example, Ball said, he likes that family and picnic areas are proposed at park trailheads. "I think that is really good as a way to draw people into using the system," he said.

Nothing's final yet

Parks officials caution that the master plan's recommendations aren't final. They simply outline the anticipated ways a diverse collection of land -- meadows along the creek, rugged hillsides and thick woods -- will be used.
Those include balancing the existing ecosystem with active recreation areas such as trails and sports fields, Jones said.
The master plan calls for increasing the total forest land to 1,980 acres, from the existing 1,514 acres, and for increasing more than 500 acres of grassland through plantings and natural regeneration.
Wallace Roberts & Todd also lays out what it sees as the best uses for specific parcels of land. That includes sports fields on flat land close to Interstate 64, while leaving more rugged land to the south for hiking and camping.
"This operates on two levels -- one as a park for the entire community and one that also serves the needs of those people who live in that neighborhood or live around it," said Jim Walters, a Louisville architect consulting on the project.
Jones says there's a third level: Like state parks, the Floyds Fork project will be designed as a regional destination.

What the planners want

The master plan envisions eight miles of new roads leading to the parks and running through them.
From the north, vehicles would enter through a proposed extension of Blue Heron Lane, which starts at Shelbyville Road and ends at a Metropolitan Sewer District wastewater treatment plant along Floyds Fork.
Jones said planners prefer that route over using Beckley Station Road -- which he said would be a "harder, windier" road -- to enter the parks.
"It's just a much better way of getting people in," he said, adding that landscape improvements to parts of the treatment plant grounds would be planned.
MSD executive director Bud Schardein said MSD is willing to build a pavilion with public restrooms, which would cost less than $10,000, and allow parks officials to extend Blue Heron Lane across its property; 21st Century Parks would pay for the road improvements using federal funds already dedicated to the project.
Other major park entry points would be south of Taylorsville Road at Floyds Fork Park; on Brush Run Road west of Echo Trail; and where the creek passes under Bardstown Road.

What about the traffic?

Patricia L. Miles, who has lived in the Floyds Fork corridor for three decades, said she's opposed to more traffic in the area, including a new park road not far from her home.
"It's quiet and peaceful out there," she said, "and we would not want that changed."
The master plan envisions Echo Trail as a park drive outside the park boundaries.
It would be similar, Jones said, to Alta Vista Road serving as an entry road into Cherokee Park. Improving roads near the park would be the city's responsibility.
Abramson said it's too early to talk about specific roads, but he said, "We're going to make sure they're safe and provide easy access to this wonderful green space."
Morgan Nutt, president of the Jeffersontown Youth Soccer Association, said he's not concerned about traffic. He worries about vandalism.
"I'm a little nervous about all of this because nobody knew about this area and … everybody's going to be made aware of it," he said. "But if everybody takes care of it, it's going to be fine."
Jones and Abramson both acknowledge that there will need to be increased security in the parks, and that those discussions, which include the police, already are under way. And 21st Century promises a privately-funded endowment to cover maintenance.
Construction is expected to begin in 2009, Jones said, with most of the project to be completed between 2013 and 2015.
"This plan is funded, and it's going to get built," he said. "It's real. It's going to happen."

Notícia com links

Vídeo com Dan Jones, CEO da 21st Century Parks Project, que fala destes planos

"População incitada a registar espaços verdes"

Na Times online , da Times de hoje

Public urged to register green areas

People should take steps to protect areas of green space that they have used informally for years - before developers try to exploit them, conservationists urged.
The Henley-based Open Spaces Society said that many communities took their green spaces for granted, only to find it difficult and expensive to get them protected once they were threatened by development. But if land had been used by residents for informal recreation for 20 years they could register it with local authorities as a green space, affording it legal protection from “encroachment” under 19th-century laws. It was a process much easier to achieve if the land was not already earmarked for development, said Kate Ashbrook, the society’s general secretary.
Once developers were interested in land they could put financial and legal resources into opposing bids to register the place, Ms Ashbrook said.
She cited Croxley Green in Hertfordshire, where it took four years and a public inquiry to save their green space from development. She also said the Cloffocks in Workington, Cumbria - where a traditional Easter game of “Uppies and Downies” has been played for centuries - has not been registered and campaigners are now fighting plans for a Tesco supermarket on the site.
On the type of open space that could be registered, she said: “It could be land behind a housing estate. It’s not going to be your traditional bit of village green but could be somewhere the kids have always used.”
She said people took that kind of land for granted and then were shocked when development plans were drawn up for it.
Writing in the society’s magazine, Open Space, she said: “Parish and community councils and other local groups should set up a task force to seek out and map those bits of land which local residents cherish.
“With good evidence of use and the Open Spaces Society’s help, they can get them registered as greens now.
“That will thwart future developers and secure the space for all time.”
She added that since the law on protecting village greens was clarified last April, the number of queries the society had received on how to register green spaces had doubled

Como Hoje se fazem jardins. Em Odivelas:


Decidida a criação do Jardim da Música em Odivelas



Em reunião ordinária do Executivo Municipal realizada na Quarta-feira, foi aprovado, por unanimidade, o projecto de construção do Jardim da Música.

Notícia aqui