Planning at the Landscape ScaleRoutledge, 2006年11月22日 - 224 頁 Traditionally, landscape planning has involved the designation and protection of exceptional countryside. However, whilst this still remains important, there is a growing recognition of the multi-functionality of rural areas, and the need to encourage sustainable use of the whole countryside rather than just its ‘hotspots’. With an inter-disciplinary assessment of the rural environment, this book draws on theories of landscape values, people-place relationships, sustainable development, and plan implementation. It focuses on the competing influences of globalization and localization, seeing the role of planning as the reconciliation of these conflicting demands, reinforcing character and distinctiveness without museum-izing rural areas. Taking a ‘landscape scale’ approach to the topic, this book responds to the interest sparked by concern for rural landscapes and by recent local and national policy shifts in this area. |
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... landscape planning, however, whilst hugely important in their own right, are now seen to represent only part of the story. The contention of this book is that the notion of 'landscape scale' should be mainstreamed into the practice of ...
... landscape' (Gwyn, 2002) has been used to signify the capacity of places to articulate or evoke intangible acts of ... planning has compounded the process of polarisation. The use of zonal plans to influence the location of future development, ...
... landscapes often requires stemming this change, and reaffirming local qualities whose social and economic raison d'être may be vestigial. Some of the most challenging problems of landscape scale planning arise from this paradox. Thus ...
... planner's spatial frame of reference. It can be recorded from a satellite or ... development and plan implementation. It is an area where different groups ... landscape can mean a small patch of urban wasteland as much as a mountain ...
... landscape scale planning may well be associated with recapturing the serendipitous balance between economic need, emotional attachment and ecological dynamics that appears to have transpired in many traditional, lowintensity landscapes ...