1st Edition

Planning The Total Landscape A Guide To Intelligent Land Use

By Julius Fabos Copyright 1979
    202 Pages
    by Routledge

    181 Pages
    by Routledge

    Rapid changes in land use, especially in growing metropolitan areas, have created problems that increasingly indicate an urgent need for techniques and procedures for making intelligent land-use decisions. This book identifies the potential undesirable effects of land-use changes and provides techniques for estimating and minimizing them. Based on several years of research conducted by a team of thirty-four faculty and assistants, the study shows how planners and decision makers can benefit from such contemporary planning tools as remote sensing, statistical analysis, and computer technology, as well as a variety of evaluation procedures. Part 1 describes the problems of contemporary urbanization and offers a set of planning principles and tools for working with the environmental landscape. These principles and tools are the basis of the procedures detailed in Part 2; the assessment procedures, in turn, are an essential part of the two current planning approaches—the holistic, landscape approach and the parametric approach—described in Part 3.

    Introduction -- The Emergence of Landscape Concern and Planning Techniques -- The Problems of Metropolitanization -- The Evolution of Landscape Planning Principles -- The Tools of Landscape Planning -- Environmental Assessment Procedures -- Assessment of Landscape Resources -- Assessment of Landscape Hazards -- Assessment of Development Suitability -- Assessment of Human Impact on the Environment -- Synthesis -- Landscape Planning Procedures

    Biography

    Julius Gy. Fabos, professor of landscape planning and director of the program in regional planning at the University of Massachusetts, received a masters degree in landscape architecture from Harvard University and a Ph.D. in resource planning and conservation from the University of Michigan. Dr. Fabos is also visiting professor at the Centre for Environmental Studies in Parkville, Australia.