Green Infrastructure Design
Green infrastructure (GI) design is the planning and implementation of natural or nature-based systems (vegetation, soils, water bodies) integrated into urban environments to provide multiple ecosystem services: stormwater management, air quality improvement, heat island mitigation, biodiversity habitat, recreation, and social well-being. Emerged in the 2000s as a sustainability paradigm, green infrastructure combines landscape design, hydrology, ecology, and urban planning to create multifunctional spaces that serve practical and aesthetic goals.
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- Freeman, R. C. (2005). Green Infrastructure: Intelligent Landscapes for the Twenty-First Century. Routledge. · ISBN 978-0415772662
- U.S. Green Building Council. (2012). LEED Reference Guide for Building Design and Construction. USGBC. · URL
- Tzoulas, K., Korpela, K., Vigo, S., et al. (2007). Promoting Ecosystem and Human Health in Urban Areas Using Green Infrastructure: A Literature Review. Landscape and Urban Planning, 81(3–4), 167–178. · DOI 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2007.02.001
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