Participatory Design of Nature-Based Solutions: Usability of Tools for Water Professionals
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Study Area: Eight Brook Catchments
2.1. Socio-Ecological System of Brook Catchments
2.2. Site Selections
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. A Stepwise Framework for Tool Selection
3.2. Step 1: Tools Collection and Selection
3.3. Step 2: Tools Classification
3.4. Step 3: Grading (of the Tools)
3.5. Step 4: Mapping
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Framework for Selection of Participatory Tools for Designing NbS
4.2. Step 1: Collection and Selection
4.3. Step 2: Classification
4.3.1. Co-Creation Stage
4.3.2. Knowledge Stage
4.3.3. Transition Stage
4.4. Step 3: Grading
4.5. Step 4: Mapping
4.6. Tooling Insights and Trends
4.7. Case Study Comparison on Participatory Tool Selection: Pre and during Pandemic
- a website of the project where online tools were incorporated such as:
- ‘views on the climate issues survey’ (KT3) in the problem definition stage,
- ‘online ideation’ (CCT1/KT11) in the action plan stage,
- live workshops and field trips such as:
- ‘landscape planning’ (CCT2) in the action plan stage,
- ‘final design presentation’ (CCT3) in the evaluation stage, and
- ‘stakeholder forum’ (TT2) in the action plan stage.
- ‘hydrological model’ (KT1) of the catchment in the problem definition stage.
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Catchments | Country | Key Characteristics |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Laakbeek | Belgium | Small brook passes through the semi-urban village with flooding history. Not much space for adaptation measures. |
2 | The Culm | The United Kingdom | Brook passes a new ‘green’ development area and main railway. Flooding is the main HMH causing deterioration in water quality. |
3 | Liane | France | Brook passes a rural area with urbanized banks causing flooding and soil erosion. |
4 | Aa of Weerijs | The Netherlands | Brook passes a rural area with a high density of tree nurseries for export. Main HMH is drought due to high water demand and flooding in moments of peak flows. |
5 | Porlock Vale | The United Kingdom | Brook passes a steep valley, creating a high risk of flooding in several villages. |
6 | Somerset Levels and Moors | The United Kingdom | Flooding at lower reaches in several villages. |
7 | Vlissingen | The Netherlands | Channelized brooks pass through the new ‘green’ development area. Flooding is the main HMH. |
8 | West Flanders | Belgium | Brook passes between two villages and has a history of flooding. |
Question | Type | Criteria | |
---|---|---|---|
Catchments | MC | - | |
Communication type | MC | Ad hoc, One-way, Two-way, stakeholder engagement, participatory decision making [29,30] | |
Type of stakeholders | MC | Non-technical stakeholders (farmers, landowners, local communities; Non-agricultural businesses); Technical stakeholders (Educational and research institutions; NGO’s; Governments; Chamber of Agriculture) | |
Description of tool | OQ | Used to classify tools as: Knowledge Tool (KTx), Transition Tool (TTx), Co-Creation Tool (CCTx) | |
Primary Objective | MC | Improve system understanding; Identify indicators and criteria; Identify issues, preferences, management options; Communication of knowledge; Identify knowledge gaps; Obtain information from stakeholders; Creation of knowledge with stakeholder; Evaluation (adapted from [17]) | |
NbS Design Process Stages | MC | Actor analysis; Motivation; Problem Definition; Project Definition; Action Plan; Implementation; Evaluation (adapted from [31] and [32]) | |
Other Stages | MC | Actor analysis; Motivation; Problem Definition; Project Definition; Action Plan; Implementation; Evaluation (adapted from [31] and [32]) | |
Level of participation | /Informing, consulting, involving, collaborating, empowering (adapted from [33,34]) | ||
Strengths (from practitioner’s perspective) | OQ | - | |
Weaknesses (from practitioner’s perspective) | OQ | - | |
Practical Considerations | Time | MC | Low (few days); Medium (few weeks); High (few months) |
Budget | MC | Low (<100 euros); Medium (<1000 euros); High (>1000 euros) | |
No. participants | MC | Small (<20); Medium (<100); Big (>100) |
No. | Criteria | Score | Score Description | Justification |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Open Access | 0 | Yes | Cost is an important consideration in defining the usability tools [45] hence the need for utilizing open access tools. |
1 | No | |||
2 | Web Interface | 0 | Yes | Tools with web interfaces reach larger and broader audiences which would translate to increasing the potential to discuss more outcomes and enhanced understanding of menagement measures such as NbS [44,45] |
1 | No | |||
3 | Data Granularity | 1 | High level; national level data | Data granularity refers to the extend of detali in a specific data point [40]. More granular data sllows more thorought system{s} modelling however it can be hard to find in open source environments [46]. |
2 | General data with sector specific information | |||
3 | Localized sector data and localized technical data | |||
4 | Data Accessibility | 1 | Data available for most developed and developing countries | Data acessibility is an ongoing challeng specifically for accurate design of NbS. Acessibility is always connected to the granularity – hardly accessible data points are more likely to be detailed and difficult to measure. |
2 | Data is hardly accessible for developing countries | |||
3 | Difficult to access data, derivation might require modelling tools | |||
5 | Number of Data Inputs | 1 | 0–15 | Data inputs entail how many inputs a tool requires for the design of NbS. |
2 | 16–32 | |||
3 | 33+ | |||
6 | Needed Subject Expertise | 1 | Expertise not needed | The expertise needed for the users to be able to actively participate/use the specific tool. |
2 | Needs an understanding of general subject matter | |||
3 | Expertise and high skill needed | |||
7 | Training Intensity | 1 | 1 day | Trainings come with additional costs, time and resources. They can include online tutorials, independent instructions, in-person trainings etc. |
2 | 2–3 days | |||
3 | 1 week | |||
8 | User-Defined Scenarios | 1 | Yes | User-defined scenarios give added value for the process of designing NbS however they add to the complexity of the tool. |
0 | No/N-A |
Participatory Tool—title | KT | CCT | TT | Code |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hydrological model | ✓ | KT1 | ||
Face to face field visits | ✓ | KT2 | ||
‘Views on the climate issues’ survey | ✓ | KT3 | ||
Knowledge transfer website and newsletter | ✓ | KT4 | ||
Public technical stakeholders’ meetings | ✓ | KT5 | ||
Public citizen meetings (Online) | ✓ | KT6 | ||
Public citizen meetings (Physical) | ✓ | KT7 | ||
Knowledge co-creation workshop | ✓ | KT8 | ||
The walking app | ✓ | ✓ | * KT9/CCT8 | |
Online ideation | ✓ | ✓ | * KT11/CCT1 | |
Adaptation Pathways tool | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | * CCT9/TT11/KT10 |
Landscape planning | ✓ | CCT2 | ||
Final design presentation | ✓ | CCT3 | ||
Individual farm visits | ✓ | CCT4 | ||
Digital collaboration tools | ✓ | CCT5 | ||
The Forum | ✓ | CCT6 | ||
Film Nights | ✓ | CCT7 | ||
Flyer for planned future events | ✓ | TT1 | ||
Stakeholder forum/Round table | ✓ | TT2 | ||
Permanent information plaques and project area accessibility | ✓ | TT3 | ||
Educational trainings and materials for primary schools | ✓ | TT4 | ||
Maptionnaire | ✓ | TT5 | ||
Citizen Science | ✓ | TT6 | ||
Storymaps | ✓ | TT7 | ||
Travel guide to climate robust river landscapes | ✓ | TT8 | ||
Design thinking—Embassy of Water | ✓ | TT9 | ||
Citizen meetings | ✓ | TT10 | ||
Landscape Fund | ✓ | TT12 |
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Bogatinoska, B.; Lansu, A.; Hugé, J.; Dekker, S.C. Participatory Design of Nature-Based Solutions: Usability of Tools for Water Professionals. Sustainability 2022, 14, 5562. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095562
Bogatinoska B, Lansu A, Hugé J, Dekker SC. Participatory Design of Nature-Based Solutions: Usability of Tools for Water Professionals. Sustainability. 2022; 14(9):5562. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095562
Chicago/Turabian StyleBogatinoska, Borjana, Angelique Lansu, Jean Hugé, and Stefan C. Dekker. 2022. "Participatory Design of Nature-Based Solutions: Usability of Tools for Water Professionals" Sustainability 14, no. 9: 5562. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095562
APA StyleBogatinoska, B., Lansu, A., Hugé, J., & Dekker, S. C. (2022). Participatory Design of Nature-Based Solutions: Usability of Tools for Water Professionals. Sustainability, 14(9), 5562. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095562