11–12 June, St. Petersburg:
Marble Palace (Mramorny Dvorets, Ìðàìîðíûé Äâîðåö), Ìèëëèîííàÿ óë., 5/1 (Millionnaya Street)
| Time |
Event |
Chair / Theme |
Speakers |
Monday, 11th June, Marble palace, St. Petersburg |
8:00–9:00 |
Registration |
9:00–9:30 |
Formal Greetings |
| |
Vasiliy Kichedzhi (Vice-governor of St. Petersburg) |
| |
Julia Kiseleva (Administration of Saint-Petersburg) |
| |
Larisa Kanunnikova (Administration of Saint-Petersburg) |
| |
Nigel Thorne (EFLA) |
| |
Taisia Volftrub (Russian Association of Landscape Architects) |
9:30–10:10 |
Coffee break |
10:10–11:10 |
Session 1
2 presentations of 30 minutes
|
Keynote Presentations |
Larisa Kanunnikova (Russia)
Historic green infrastructure of St. Petersburg: present and future
Nancy Rottle (USA)
Urban Green Infrastructure for Climate Benefit: Global to Local |
11:10–11:15 |
Break |
11:15–13:00 |
3 parallel sessions |
Session 2.1
6 presentations of 15 minutes
Room 1 |
Chair: Rolf Johansson
Green Heritage
(part 1) |
Naoko Fujita (Japan)
Effects of design and location of sacred places for urban green infrastructure
Rolf Johansson (Sweden)
The Baroque Garden in the Tessin House in Stockholm
Haris Piplas (Switzerland)
Legacies of green infrastructure in Sarajevo – a historic garden city without green future?
Helena Gutmane (Latvia)
Cemetery as a park: heterotopian nature of a Great Cemetery in Riga
Pinar Koylu (Turkey)
Heritage contributing to sustainability: Topkapi Palace – then and now
Tian Rui (China)
Brief Analysis of the research of traditional Green gardening method |
Session 2.2
6 presentations of 15 minutes
Room 2 |
Chair: Maria Ignatieva
Green Infrastructure in different scales: international case studies
(part 1) |
Jeroen de Vries (NL)
Rijnenburg, an ecological framework for urban development
Irina Melnichuk (Russia), Maria Ignatieva (Sweden)
Green infrastructure of St. Petersburg as a factor of sustainable development
Dagmar Grimm-Pretner, Karl Grimm (Austria)
Understanding the Atlanta BeltLine as a working landscape
Andreas Roloff, Sten Gillner (Germany)
Climate-Species Matrix – a new approach for the selection of tree species for urban habitats with regard to climate change
Diana Lavinia Culescu (Romania)
Thinking wasteland as valuable asset for green urban infrastructure
Sultan Gunduz, Gulsen Guler
Macroscale plans in Turkey and Green Infrastructure Road Map: Istanbul and Bursa cases |
Session 2.3
6 presentations of 15 minutes
Room 3 |
Chair: Olivier Damee
Transport and Green Infrstructure |
Josep Mercade Aloy, Marina Cervera Alonso de Medina, Francesc Magrinya Torner (Spain)
Taming the road: methodology for strategic recycling of existing road network to green infrastructures
Semiha Demirbas Caglayan (Turkey)
Roads are damaging Turkey's protected areas
Jorg Sieweke (USA)
Miss!ssippi
Thomas Juel Clemmensen (Denmark)
Roads belong in the urban landscape
Faris Karahan, Hasan Yilmaz (Turkey)
Corridor Management plan and scenic byway proposal for northeastern Anatolia, Turkey
Marina Cervera Alonso de Medina, Josep Mercade Aloy (Spain)
From road obsolescence to contemporary European low ecological cost network |
Question time – 15 minutes |
13:00–14:00 |
Lunch |
14:00–15:30 |
3 parallel sessions |
Session 3.1
5 presentations of 15 minutes
Room 2 |
Chair: Diane Menzies
Green Infrastructure in different scales: international case studies
(part 3)
Russian case studies (this session was organized due to the request for simultaneous translation) |
Andrei Baschkirov (Russia), Maria Ignatieva (Sweden)
Using ecodesign for creating sustainable urban environment: Novoe Devyatkino in St. Petersburg
Vera Frolova (Russia)
Quality and perception of urban open spaces
Olga Lisova (Russia)
Perspectives on construction and reconstruction of urban parks in Voronezh
Alexey Sayanov (Russia)
Peculiarities of green infrastructure in new "cottage" villages
Olga Chernyschenko (Russia)
Nature heritage of Moscow |
Session 3.2
6 presentations of 15 minutes
Room 1 |
Chair: Irina Melnichuk
Green Heritage
(part 2) |
Lubica Feriancova, Attila Toth (Slovakia)
Green Infrastructure and its importance for village restoration and rural development in Central Europe
Kristine Dreija (Latvia)
Latvian Cultural and natural heritage – historic gardens and parks: vision of state and community
Roger Elg (Sweden)
Planning and design with trees and shrubs in open public places: case study of Uppsala (1800–2010)
Mehdi HaghighatBin, Mojtaba Ansari (Iran)
The preservation of Isfahan Persian Gardens as a Green Heritage
Gul Gunes (Turkey)
Urban Parks as green-blue infrastructures: the Ankara Mogan Park Case
Meltem Erdem, Meliz Akyol (Turkey)
Through Historical Landscape to Urban Ecological Network: Themes & Context |
Session 3.3
6 presentations of 15 minutes
Room 2 |
Chair: Shelley Egoz
Green Infrastructure in different scales: international case studies
(part 2) |
Bertram de Rooij, Martin Knuijt, Eva Radionova, Andrew van Egmond (NL); Taisia Volftrub, Vera Ivanova (Russia)
Green River Brateevo
Shelley Egoz (NZ)
Landscape as infrastructure: Asserting the Right to Landscape
S. Machado Doesburg, P.Farinha Marques (Portugal)
"Marginal" Urban Vegetation
Muge Tokus, Hayriye Esbah, Serdal Cosgun (Turkey)
Assessing the Green Infrastructure Potential in Sariyer, Istambu
Andrijana Vukadinovic, Andjelka Jevtovic (Serbia)
Urban forests and the needs of visitors: case study of the Park-Forest Kosutnjak
A.C. Meeuwsen, D. Sijmons (NL)
Ecological engineering to enrich the future |
15:30–16:00 |
Poster session and afternoon tea |
16:00–17:15
|
3 parallel sessions |
Session 4.1
4 presentations of 15 minutes
Room 1 |
Chair:Maria Ignatieva
Green Heritage
(part 3)
Russian case studies (this session was organized due to the request for simultaneous translation) |
Olga Cherdantseva, Irina Melnichuk, Maria Ignatieva (Russia)
Restoration of the Summer Garden, the oldest urban garden and the "green heart" of St. Petersburg
Tatiyana Andryuschko, Alexandr Tereschkin (Russia)
Conditions and future of green areas in big cities of Volga Region
Olga Semeniuk (Russia)
Green infrastructure: historic landscape architecture
Alexandra Kupriyanova, Ekaterina Velichko (Russia)
Alexandrov's dacha as a green heritage of Pavlovsk |
Session 4.2
4 presentations of 15 minutes
Room 3 |
Chair: Diane Menzies
Complex nature of green infrastructure |
Gozde Yucesan Yilmaz, Mehmet Cemil Aktas, Semiha Demirbas Caglayan, Ozan Yilmaz, Ege Kaska (Turkey)
Bademilidere: a strory from a capital
Karl Grimm, Dagmar Grimm-Pretner (Austria)
Rainwater Management in Open Spaces as a Challenge for Landscpae Architecture exemplified by a case study in Vienna, Austria
Fatma Aycim Turer Baskaya (Turkey)
Revealing the potentials of Historical Groves in Istanbul
Maja Todorovic Izquierdo, Andreja Tutundzic (Serbia)
Planning the Green Infrastructure of the Urban Sprawls – Case Study of the Kumodraz Stream Watershed in Belgrade |
Session 4.3
4 presentations of 15 minutes
Room 3 |
Chair: Tuula Eriksson
Social and Green Infrastructure |
Wingsze Vincci Mak (Hong Kong)
Green infrastructure x infrastructure for the dead
Krzysztof Herman (Poland)
Vegetative outdoor advertising as a green infrastructure
Andreja Tutundzic, Maja Todorovoc Izquierdo (Serbia)
Urban agriculture, marginal societies and green infrastructure – is there a possible link
Ahmed Haron (China), Zeinab Feisal (Egypt)
Relationship between Community and nature in the Egyptian villages |
17:15–18:00 |
Questions and discussion |
19:00 |
Dinner |
Tuesday, 12th June, Marble palace, St. Petersburg |
9:00–10:00 |
Session 5
2 presentations of 30 minutes |
Chair: Victor Smertin
Keynote presentations |
Clas Florgård
Perspectives of urban blue-green infrastructure
Per Berg
Resilient Citylands – Launching a New Research program for Sustainable Human Habitats in the Baltic Sea Region |
10:00–10:30 |
Session 6
2 presentations of 15 minutes |
Chair: Tuula Eriksson
Social and Green Infrastructure |
Magdalena Rembeza, Tomasz Rozwadowski (Poland)
Idealism and practice of public participation in the context of the rising pressure of economic success. The coastal strip in Gdansk as a case study
Manuel Vicente Espliguero (Spain)
New uses of industrial spaces |
10:30–11:00 |
Morning tea and poster session |
11:00–12:15 |
Session 7
4 presentations of 15 minutes |
Chair: Irina Melnichuk
Green Infrastructure in different scales: international case studies |
Gintaras Stauskis, Vaiva Deveikiene (Lithuania)
Sustainable water management as a tool to increase identity of urban landscapes
Charles Wade, James Kielbaso (USA)
Changes in the green infrastructure with emphasis on the size and condition of urban trees in six cities in the Midwestern region of the United States of America
Sung-Kyun Kim (Korea)
Korean Traditional Pungsu as a Green-Blue Infrastructure
Olivier Damee (France)
Public transportation and green infrastructure: a new city for its inhabitants: the case of the tramways in France |
| Question time – 15 minutes |
12:30–13:00 |
Bruno Marques
EFLA Regional Congress 2011 in Tallinn: the results (video) |
13:00–14:00 |
Lunch |
14:00–18:00 |
Conference excursion in St. Petersburg
Summer Garden and Imperial Gardens of Russia |
| Wednesday, 13th June |
11:25 |
Departure on "Allegro" Train, St. Petersburg, Finnish Railway station |
14:01 |
Arrival to Helsinki |
|
Excursion in Helsinki by bus (from Train Station to Ferry terminal with two stops at the Esplanade Park and Kaivopuisto
Bus from railway station 14:15
Esplanade Park 14:30–14:45
Kaivo Park 15:00–15:45
Checking in at Viking terminal 16:00–16:15
|
16:00–16:30 |
Check-in to Ferry "Viking Line" |
17:30 |
Departure: Helsinki-Katajanokka on Ferry "Viking Line" (Gabriella) to Stockholm |
20:00–22:00 |
Workshop about Urban-Rural interactions – Launching of Resilient Citylands
20:00 Introduction to the Workshop – Maria Ignatieva, Presentation of the new Concept Resilient Citylands – Per G Berg
20:10 4 short presentations of 2–3 minutes
Comments by the Workshop panel (5 minutes)
20:30 4 short presentations of 2–3 minutes
Comments by the Workshop panel (5 minutes)
20:50–21 00 Short break with tea and fruit
21:00 4 short presentations of 2–3 minutes
Comments by the Workshop panel (5 minutes)
21:20 4 short presentations of 2–3 minutes
Comments by the Workshop panel (5 minutes)
21:40 General Discussion
22:00 End of Workshop
|
| Thursday, 14th June |
9:45 |
Arrival to Stockholm-Stadsgården |
|
Excursion in Stockholm by bus
(Picnic lunch will be provided)
Excursion to the Northern Green Wedge Haga park
3 Stockholm central city parks
Center view of Stockholms Green/blue Apex
Hammarby Sea City – the Southern Green Wedge
Leaving Stockholm 15:45
Arriving Uppsala 17:45
Excursion until 18:30
Hotel Checking in
Departure by buses for dinner at 19:00 |
19:30 |
Dinner in Ultuna Campus Restaurant (Paid by SLU) |
Friday, 15th June, Uppsala
SLU Campus in Ultuna |
8:00–9:00 |
Registration, SLU Campus in Ultuna, Loftet |
9:00–9:30 |
Formal Greetings |
| |
Johan Schnürer (SLU) |
9:30–10:30 |
Session 8
2 presentations of 30 minutes |
Keynote Presentations |
Jala Makhzoumi
Urban hinterland as bio-cultural heritage: application of an ecological landscape framework to greening Middle Eastern cities
Stephan Pauleit
Green infrastructure for Europe's growing and shrinking city regions |
10:30–11:00 |
Coffee break |
11:00–12:00 |
3 parallel sessions, Undervisningshuset, Almas allé 10 |
Session 9.1
4 presentations of 15 minutes
Room B |
Chair: Per Berg
Green Infrastructure: Ecosystem services |
Marjorie van Roon, Muhammad Farid Azizul (NZ)
Exploring the roles of ecological networks and Ecosystem service assessments in socio-ecological systems
Mari Ariluoma (Finland)
Ecosystem services in urban planning – mapping and visions
Pauolo Farinha-Marques, Jose Miguel Lameiras, Claudia Fernandes, Sara Silva, Filipa Guilherme, Isabel Leal (Portugal)
Urban green space biodiversity in the city of Porto – Portugal
Tomasz Stanczyk, Malgorzata Okolowicz (Poland)
Indentification of blue infrastructure in Warsaw, Poland |
Session 9.2
4 presentations of 15 minutes
Room C |
Chair: David Myers
Green-Blue Infrastructure
(part 1)
|
Sophie Bullynck (Belgium)
Droogdokkenpark: a tidal park at Antwerp
Diane Menzies (NZ)
And now for something completely different: green infrastructure in a very wet region of the world compared with historic wetland cities
Katja Sosic, Tatjana Uzelac (Croatia)
Green infrastructure against flooding as a new challenge of the town of Pula, Croatia
Manuela Magalhaes, Ana Muller, Joana Lopes, Joao Ferreira, Natalia Pena, B. Selma (Portugal)
The coastal area in ecological network |
Session 9.3
4 presentations of 15 minutes
Room D |
Chair: Tuula Eriksson
The link between green and social infrastructure |
Julia Sulina (Estonia)
Landscape of identity value as a part of Estonian green infrastructure
Nastaran Tebyanian, Maziar Memar (Iran)
Green infrastructure as a basis for social cohesion: a case study from Iran
Lilita Lazdane (Latvia)
Indicators in understanding of human sensory perception factors in watermill landscapes: a case study undertaken in Latgale Upland area of Latvia
Natalie Gulstrud (Denmark)
Green space branding: are Danish cities capitalizing on their green space assets |
12:00–13:00 |
Lunch |
13:00–14:15 |
3 parallel sessions, Undervisningshuset, Almas allé 10 |
Session 10.1
4 presentations of 15 minutes
Room B |
Chair: Maria Ignatieva
Green Infrastructure: Low Impact Design |
Frederic Dellinger (France)
Green infrastructure and stormwater management in a city centre
Wenjie Li, David Myers (USA)
The contribution of green roofs to green infrastructure: two case studies in Washington DC, USA
Kerimova N., Morozova M (Russia)
Commercial zones as a resource for urban green infrastructure
M.P. van Roon, T.P.M. Rigold, B. Burns (NZ)
Green Infrastructure: the composition and sustainability of per-urban planted tree communities in stream gullies in New Zealand |
Session 10.2
3 presentations of 15 minutes
Room C |
Chair: Diane Menzies
Sustainable Green Infrastructure |
David Myers (USA)
A scale approach to green infrastructure: principles, policies, and practices in the State of Maryland, USA
Richard Perron, Robert Zonneveld (Canada)
Ecological infrastructure: an examination of three Canadian Cities
Isabel Martinho da Silva (Portugal)
Guidelines for the design of sustainable green infrastructure |
Session 10.3
5 presentations of 15 minutes
Room D |
Chair: Madeleine Granvik
Green Infrastructure in urban and rural planning |
Francesco Martinico, Riccardo Privitera (Italy)
Characterization of non-urbanized areas for land-use planning of agricultural and green infrastructure in urban contexts
Stuart Hope (Sweden)
Tampere: A holistic approach to masterplanning
Madeleine Granvik (Sweden)
The regional scale of green structure – the approach to agricultural land in municipal comprehensive planning
Manuela Magalhaes, Natalia Cunha, Selma B. Pena, Ana Muller (Portugal)
Ecological network in Portugal
Banu Cicek Kurdoglu, Sara Demir, Sultan Sevinc Kurt (Turkey)
Green continuity: contribution of greenways to city and urban life |
14:15–14:30 |
Poster session |
14:30–15:15 |
Session 11
3 presentations of 15 minutes
Room B |
Chair: Rolf Johansson
Built-Green Infrastructure and their interaction |
Elena Zaykova (Russia)
Green infrastructure: a park-house as a part of architectural environment
Una Ile (Latvia)
20th century multi-storey residential areas
Renata Giedych, Gabriela Maksymiuk, Barbara Szulczewska (Poland)
How far are we from the idea of green infrastructure implementation? Green measures applied in Poland |
15:15–17:30 |
Session 12
7 presentations of 15 minutes
Room C |
Chair: Shelley Egoz
Green Infrastructure and urban design |
Indra Purs (Latvia)
Scenarios for Season's Urbanism
Anita Szöbölödi (Hungary)
Analysis of urban open space system – providing the "flow" for living systems |
15:45–16:15 |
Coffee break and poster session |
| |
|
|
Alexandr Gorodkov (Russia)
Problems of arranged green spaces protection in conditions of new architectural policy
Mihai Culescu, Ioana Streaza, Ioana Tudora, Christian Voinescu (Romania)
Scales of landscapes, scales of design
Evita Alle (Latvia)
Search for the relational complex system: A theoretical framework for interconnections between a landscape and contemporary art
Ricardo A. Gomes, Sara Velho, Ana F. Ferreira, Joana Pimentel, Daniela Silva, Carla Goncalves (Portugal)
180 years of urban evolution in four European cities-built area, open space and green infrastructure
Richard Perron (Canada)
If the organism is the enemy, then what? |
| |
Question time – 15 minutes |
17:30–18:00 |
Discussion and closing of the Congress |
18:00–18:30 |
Soundscape Walk with Per Hedfors |
During the Green infrastructure Conference we offer you an opportunity to investigate a special aspect of green/blue infrastructure during the sea travel: the interaction between urban and rural and the interdependency between built and green/blue structures. During this Workshop we invite participants to present short discussion issues (2–3 minutes), related to the theme of the workshop – with a direct commentary discussion by a workshop panel after each theme with 4 presentations. In introducing this workshop – the organizing partners (SLU Uppsala and FTU St Petersburg) will also launch a new proposed working concept for the interaction of Sustainable Cities with their exterior and interior hinterland/blue-green infrastructure: Resilient Citylands.
Submit proposals for the Workshop If you wish to participate in this workshop, contributing to and presenting aspects of urban and rural interaction or the interdependencies between built and green structures of various scales – please submit a title for a short (2–3) minutes presentation during the workshop. See below for examples, which could be related to this theme. The organizing committee will select an appropriate number of short presentations (15–20) and also organize them thematically. If you wish to show pictures – the organizers will ask selected presenters to submit 1–2 pictures – which they wish to show the auditorium. Each presentation will be shortly commented by a Workshop panel. We particularly welcome examples from different countries, cultures, cities, rural areas to illuminate the theme. Please send proposals to the conference secretariat.
Resilient Citylands is a new concept for describing future Human Settlements organized in accordance with the United Nations Habitat agenda. In our National and Baltic Sea Region research as well as in our European context research and practice, we see both pressing needs and clear opportunities to introduce the Citylands perspective as a useful Landscape architecture concept for the future.
Resilient is here defined as the ability of (Human) Settlements to withstand natural (global change reverberations) and cultural perturbations (through urbanization or depopulation of rural areas) through resistance and adaptation. Citylands is here defined as Urban-Rural and Built-green/blue structures in a range of scales, which draws upon a modern and historic interaction between well-planned Cities and towns on the one hand and sustainably used natural ecosystems and culturally moulded ecosystems on the other. Citylands encompass the interaction between large scale green belts and green wedges and the morphology of the planned and built cityscapes – from regional to the city-scale. It also relates to the internal green structure inside cities and towns of parks, gardens, inner courtyards, green playgrounds, graveyards, alleys, ceremonial places. It further relates to the interaction of transport infrastructures and their linings and integration with green areas and connections. Citylands can and should be described from larger scales (regions and cities and their surrounding productive or recreational hinterland) to middle scale (district green, parks, rivers) and to the small scale (courtyards, small gardens, swales, stormwater management designs, riverfront details). The function of green/blue structures could be for primary production (food and bioenergy), ecosystem services or recreation. Before the Workshop we will provide a background material for your further preparation.