Soil and Water as Resources: How Landscape Architecture Reclaims Hydric Contaminated Soil for Public Uses in Urban Settlements
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Everything is connected to everything else. There is a single ecosphere in which all living organisms survive and the effects on one of them have consequences for all the others;
- Everything must go somewhere. There is no waste in nature because everything is part of a chain that connects matter and energy;
- Nature knows best. Every change caused by man can produce damage to the natural system;
- There is no such thing as a free lunch. In ecology, there is no profit that can be achieved without a corresponding cost.
2. Materials and Methods
- First part: The Beauty and the Beast. Resources and opportunities of disturbed wet soil. This part Identifies interventions in which, starting from former landfills, in environments characterized by the presence of water, design intervention has managed to overturn the landfills’ conversion into a new hydric ecosystem. The essay proposes a reclamation of disturbed lands and a landfill remediation taxonomy, which implements design strategies focusing on two main topics: the Performance of Nature and the Recovering Landscape, both improving a new Aesthetic of Ecology [9]. Through design and the ecological landscape’s restoration, contaminated soils assume new forms and values becoming new landmarks and new contemporary parks, recovering lost cultural and natural values.
- In the second part we observe, in the built environment, paradigms where the Aesthetic Experience in relation to the Environmental Ethics transforms polluted industrial urban sites into fertile public ecosystems. We discuss European models: successfully built public space where soil remediation has transformed heavily polluted industrial urban sites into fertile public ecosystems within the dense urban built environment. These places are now accessible to people, becoming an active part in the cultural life of cities. This part of the essay develops a possible framework for the conversion of brownfields into new ecosystems where water plays a fundamental role in the remediation processes, structuring different design categories for contemporary public spaces in densely populated cities: Hypernature as Esthetic Experience, Public Nature as City Culture, Operative Nature as Environmental Ethics.
- The third part explores soil design as a domain of urban resilience. The landscape project as an integrated project has spread the seeds of a new approach to the vision of the contemporary city in an ecological manner. It is a change of direction for which it is not just a matter of greening the cities, strengthening ecological networks or designing gardens, but it is also a matter of more and more being done to insert real fragments of nature—efficient ecosystems—into the urban fabric by reconnecting the city with the its original natural context. Water and the related soil project are an essential component of context-based projects because they use existing resources that would otherwise be dispersed and, by introducing a time variable, allow the planning of an incremental evolution of places, this being the concept behind a new generation of landscape urbanism.
3. First Part: The Beauty and the Beast. Resources and Opportunities of Disturbed Wet Soil
3.1. Performance of Nature. Design Engages Nature’s Intelligence to Reduce Harmful Human Impact
3.2. Recovering Landscape. New Aesthetics of Ecology
4. Second Part: Aesthetic Experience and Environmental Ethics Transform Polluted Industrial Urban Sites into Fertile Public Ecosystems
4.1. Hypernature as Aesthetic Experience
4.2. Public Nature as City Culture
4.3. Operative Nature Sustains Environmental Ethics
5. Third Part: Soil Design as a Space of Resilience to over Flow: New Unstable Urban Landscapes
5.1. The New Trends
- The management of floods with measures to minimize the impacts of rising water on the habitat.
- The management of rainwater by giving it back the role of a resource.
5.2. Flood Management to Minimize the Impacts of Rising Water on the Habitat
5.3. The Management of Rainwater Giving Them Back the Role of Resource
6. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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Cortesi, I.; Ferretti, L.V.; Morgia, F. Soil and Water as Resources: How Landscape Architecture Reclaims Hydric Contaminated Soil for Public Uses in Urban Settlements. Sustainability 2020, 12, 8840. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12218840
Cortesi I, Ferretti LV, Morgia F. Soil and Water as Resources: How Landscape Architecture Reclaims Hydric Contaminated Soil for Public Uses in Urban Settlements. Sustainability. 2020; 12(21):8840. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12218840
Chicago/Turabian StyleCortesi, Isotta, Laura Valeria Ferretti, and Federica Morgia. 2020. "Soil and Water as Resources: How Landscape Architecture Reclaims Hydric Contaminated Soil for Public Uses in Urban Settlements" Sustainability 12, no. 21: 8840. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12218840
APA StyleCortesi, I., Ferretti, L. V., & Morgia, F. (2020). Soil and Water as Resources: How Landscape Architecture Reclaims Hydric Contaminated Soil for Public Uses in Urban Settlements. Sustainability, 12(21), 8840. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12218840