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Infrastructures of Sustainability
by M. Angrillini
Introduction 
 This document intends to confront the theme of the relationship                  between the city and natural processes with regards to the eco-sustainable                  development of the urban environment, proposing a new approach                  to the theme of open spaces and green spaces, considering them                  as sites for activating the process of environmental regeneration                  of the city. 
 The hypothesis can be reassumed in the proposal for a system of                  open spaces and green spaces configured as a network. A green                  network which is complex and penetrates deeply within the urban                  fabric, which is constructed as a fabric for ecological regeneration                  and the improvement of the hygienic and sanitary conditions of                  the urban ecosystem, contributing to the “design” and the structure                  of its form, organising and activating relationships and connections                  between its various parts. 
 A green network which assumes the connotations of a true infrastructure                  for the environmental sustainability of the city and which, equal                  to other infrastructures, performs a precise function and plays                  an important role in the urban structure. 
 A continuous framework, a grid which is no longer geometric, but                  organic, which describes the city with clarity and qualifies its                  spaces (Dierna 1996), the pattern of which invests different scales,                  from those of the geography of river networks to the urban layout                  of tree lined avenues, unfolding an ample range of morphologies:                  from those of the wild landscape to formal gardens, from cultivation                  gardens to forests, from the mirrored surface of bodies of water                  to green pathways. 
 
 The choice of the term “network” underlines a reflection which                  the world of ecology has recently undertaken through the introduction                  of the concept of an “ecological network”, while at the same time                  it manifests the will to establish analogies between “green network”                  and “technical networks”, those which are made up of continuous                  physical infrastructures such as roads, railway lines and hydro                  lines, central to the most advanced hypotheses of underlining                  the services provided by spaces and corridors of the network in                  the urban environment, making possible a process of sustainable                  development. 
 
 The intervention context for green networks is that which may                  be identified in the idea of “urban environment”. An idea which                  manifests, already through the matching of the terms “environment”                  and “urban”, the constant oscillation of the contexts of application                  between two “natures”: the “urban” and the “environmental”, in                  human settlement. 
 We must then turn to a context which is characterised by the co-existence                  of natural or almost-natural sections, together with built works                  and anthropical infrastructures, the reciprocal interferences                  between which constitute sources of either conflict or opportunity.                  The urban environment about which we are thinking includes then                  both the urban territory in addition to the extra-urban territory                  which is experiencing phenomena of urbanisation, at varying intensities.                  All the different forms of the “urban condition”, the compact                  city, the periphery, the sprawl, urbanised territories, may then                  be gathered together in a programme for a network of green spaces.
Multi-Functional Networks 
 To anticipate the realisation of green systems according to a                  “reticular” model, with the role and attributes of a complex urban                  infrastructure, is equal to advancing the proposal of an innovation                  in the culture and practice of planning of urban green spaces.
 The choice of the networks corresponds in fact in the first place                  with the objective of realising a “continuous” green system. Which                  is proposed as an alternative to the system of “fragments”, the                  result of a praxis, which attributes marginal activities to green                  spaces with a scare ability to compete with more remunerative                  uses of the urban lands. 
 The continuity of the system allows for green spaces to accept                  roles of ecological regeneration and the improvement of the hygienic                  and sanitary conditions of the urban environment, unthinkable                  through the use of the “fragments” model. An improvement in the                  ecological and environmental conditions may be activated only                  by guaranteeing the presence of green areas within the pervasive                  built fabric. 
 
 The objectives of the network, looked at as a whole, at the urban                  scale, are threefold: 
 1. assuming a role of “structure” within the urban context; 
 2. creating a “fabric” for ecological regeneration and the improvement                  of hygienic and sanitary conditions within the urban environment;                  
 3. distributing green spaces and public services and providing                  spaces for free time activities. The objective expressed in the                  second point calls for the hygienic, sanitary and ecological services                  which the green networks may perform within the urban environment,                  hilighting its role of “infrastructure of sustainability”. Hygienic                  and sanitary services concern the possibility of using the units                  of the green network in order to contribute to the restoration                  and mitigation of the impact produced by human activities on the                  urban environment. Contributing to the reduction of pollution                  of both air and water, in addition to improving micro-climatic                  conditions. 
 The ecological services deal with the capacity to restore the                  natural cycles of primary resources, air, water and the ground                  plane; increasing the level of biological diversity and the capacity                  of the urban fabric to auto-regenerate.
A Network of Networks 
 The structure that is schematically proposed as a model for the                  formation of the green network in urban environments is the result                  of the combination of open spaces and green spaces. Each different                  in nature and morphology, the typological articulation of which                  may be based on various criteria, reacting to change from the                  specific point of view adopted. That which we intend to privilege                  is a point of view which looks above all at the infrastructural                  role played by the network, attributing particular importance                  to the services being offered. In this way the considerations                  relative to the ability of space to be effective in processes                  of ecological restoration and in compensating the damage cause                  by urban activities, acquires particular significance. Capacities                  which vary as a function of the dimensions of space, the context                  of the intervention, the form of use tied to them and the characteristics                  of the project. 
 The network is schematically composed of green spaces and green                  corridors, which represent the “nodes” and the “patterns” of the                  network. 
 The nature of the spaces and the corridors may vary widely in                  a gradual system which moves from the forest to the course of                  a river, from a garden to a tree lined avenue. The range of functions                  performed by the green spaces and green corridors, dependant upon                  numerous factors, is influenced by their scale and the contexts                  in which they are located. In this way for example, the ecological                  functions are at a maximum in large spaces and corridors in low                  density urban contexts, where insertions of natural elements with                  a high biological value become plausible. While they are minimum                  at the small scale in densely constructed areas, as a benefit                  to those functions tied to human fruition. 
 
 The green network idea may be described as a “network of networks”.                  A network formed by the coming together of many networks; the                  hydrographical network, the network of road infrastructures, the                  network of technological infrastructures, the network of reserved                  areas, the network of parks and gardens, etc. 
 Networks with substantial differences and special attributes,                  whose role within the urban green network is defined by context                  and design objectives, other than by internal rationalities. 
 The networks which contribute to the construction of a green urban                  network will in fact have specific rationalities of realisation                  and management. In this way, the network tied to systems of mobility                  will undertake those functions which are prevalently hygienic                  and sanitary, as the network tied to the hydrographical network                  will largely provide ecological services.
Conclusions 
 The hypothesis of green networks as infrastructures for sustainability,                  as defined, requires a new outlook on the part of those researching                  spaces and their concrete relationships. The conditions for the                  feasibility of this proposal, above all in territories of urban                  dispersion, are in fact tied to the capacity to retrace, in the                  multitude of open spaces which mark the form of the contemporary                  city, the implicit potential for the creation of policies of green                  infrastructures. 
 According to this hypothesis, the role of open spaces, even in                  light of the recent reflections on the concept of the urban ecosystem,                  assumes a new centrality in policies for urban sustainability.                  For this reason we propose to look at open spaces not as free                  areas waiting to be built upon, but as a “resource”, taking advantage                  of the opportunity they offer as spaces for re-balancing the environment.                  
 Seen in this way, green networks as infrastructures for the environmental                  sustainability of urban contexts, if considered as public works                  offering hygienic, sanitary and ecological performances, may be                  compared to the mobility network and other technical networks,                  public works which require a collective force in terms of cost,                  but which in return offer “services”. 
 
 Naturally this approach, which underlines the functional nature                  of open spaces and green spaces, does not intend to exclude other                  approaches, from urban composition to the design of the landscape                  and the different and alternative methods of using spaces within                  the urban environment which may be imagined. Vice versa, it is                  held to be useful, in the design of this green network, to bring                  together these various hypotheses, which investigate, from different                  angles, the role and meaning of open spaces, focusing attention                  for example on their role in the urban landscape, on the history                  of transformations which they have created, etc. 
 We are not then proposing to turn the design of green networks                  into a piece of sectorial politics, but more importantly we are                  aiming at the acceptance of an integrated vision which makes green                  networks a space for experimenting with policies of urban sustainability,                  the latter to be understood in its most ample definition. 
 
 
 References 
 Angrilli, M., 2003. Reti ecologiche. Lo spazio europeo tra                  pianificazione e governance. Ecological Network. The                  European Space Between Planning and Governance. eds. F. Karrer,                  S. Arnofi, Alinea Editrice, Florence. 
 Angrilli, M., 2002. Reti verdi urbane. Urban Green Networks, Palombi                  Editori, Rome. Angrilli, M., 1999. Greenways, Urbanistica,                  113, pp. 92-96, INU, Milan.
 
	
	
	
		 
	
	
		 
	
	
	
		 
	
	
	
	
Planum
The Journal of Urbanism
ISSN 1723-0993
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ISSN 1723-0993 | Registered at Court of Rome 4/12/2001, num. 514/2001
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