The Greenkeys projects

The problem of abandoned and devalued urban areas is common among many European cities. The environmental, economic and social decline, which these areas often entail, requires rapid reconsideration and improvements as the lowering of the quality of life may not only spill over to adjacent neighbourhoods, but also the area itself does not need to be relinquished.

The cities are facing difficulties in finding an adequate solution to the main problem of how to apply methods of sustainable rehabilitation to redevelop and enhance the areas in the long term.

The European Commission has started the EU Community Initiative INTERREG III B CADSES (2005-2008), which focuses on increasing the sustainability of cities by initialising the endowment of green spaces. By means of that, local residents and medium-sized enterprises would benefit immediately, but the scientific and practical experiences gained during the projects are equally important as they will promote transnational cooperation in Europe and bring about further projects.

The key question posed by the GreenKeys project is: What are the tools and methods necessary for increasing the sustainability of urban areas by adding green spaces, given the fact that ecological, social and economical conditions are often mutually dependent?
Greenkeys focuses on the improvement of urban green spaces as a step towards more sustainable cities. The three main objectives are

  1. to provide incentives for structural changes in cities by offering opportunities for the enhancement of green spaces. Its 12 partner cities will, together with local stakeholders, develop a strategic approach for the pilot projects to create new or upgrade existing green areas to achieve more accessibility, social and recreational values and ecological efficiency. By the involvement of local activists, the political attention to the benefits of green spaces to urban environments will be increased. GreenKeys will support the implementation/evaluation of pilot projects in order
  2. to develop a “Pool of Green Strategies” (instruments, methods, concepts and good examples) based on the experiences being made to meet the demands of future needs and
  3. to use the synergies to promote the transfer of knowledge by a transnational network and, thus, foster the exchange of the particular national experiences.

In pursuing these goals, GreenKeys brings together 12 cities in 7 countries, 8 scientific supporters, external experts, design studios and NGOs, which participate through their own networks.


Links

Here you can find more external information about the problem of abandoned and devalued urban areas among many European cities.  

For a detailed search please use possibilitis at the end of the site.  

Browse results: 22 Results, page 1 of 3
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This article about the future of Placemaking was the winking answer to the resent US media interest in this topic. PPS - Project for Public Spaces - a non-profit organization is active in 26 countries to improve parks, markets, streets, transit stations, libraries and countless other places.
[Hans Kasperidus]
The Bürgerpark Bremen can be seen as an historical example of public private partnership in Germany.
[Berit Edlich]
The Website of the British Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment – CABE. CABE is a statutory body sponsored by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) and aims at inspiring people to demand more from their buildings and spaces. CABE Space aims to bring excellence to the design, management and maintenance of parks and public space in our towns and cities.
[Carlos Smaniotto]
The European Archive of Urban Public Space brings together examples of some of the most significant projects of the regeneration of public space that has occurred in different European cities over the last twenty years.
[Carlos Smaniotto]
The forum is a cooperation of various organisations to highlight green in the urban environment. We inform decision makers in politics and administration and the public about the benefits of more green. We collect international data and promote best-practice examples.
[Peter Menke]
The link to the German Federation of Landscape Architects (BDLA) - the professional association of Landscape Architects in Germany.
[Carlos Smaniotto Costa]
Green Infrastructure is a US natural life support system - an interconnected network of protected land and water that supports native species, maintains natural ecological processes, sustains air and water resources and contributes to the health and quality of life for communities.
[Carlos Smaniotto]
The website contains information about topics of urban green planning and management and descriptions of different projects in Munich. The available document \"Gruenplanung in Muenchen\" (German language) is an example for a strategy document on urban green planning.
[Stefanie Roessler]
1. Synopsis of the project 2. Project's partners 3. Decision Support Tools (DST) 4. Final Report documents (www.green-space.org)
[Maria Samardjieva]
The Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL), formerly EPHA Environment Network (EEN), is an international non-governmental organisation advocating greater protection of the environment as a means to improving the health and well being of European citizens.
[christia farrar-hockley]

what is the Link list?

GreenKeys offers links to third party web sites in the Internet. Here you find interesting external internet resources relating to the project’s topics. Please note that GreenKeys does not have any influence upon the design and the content of the sites linked. We do not make any of the contents of all sites linked ourselves. The respective publishers bear the responsibility for the content and the observance of copyrights.

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 project cordination team 

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