Academic literature on the topic 'Greenbelt'

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Journal articles on the topic "Greenbelt"

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Jeon, Jeongbae, Solhee Kim, and Sung Moon Kwon. "The Effects of Urban Containment Policies on Public Health." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 9 (May 8, 2020): 3275. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17093275.

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Public health risks such as obesity are influenced by numerous personal characteristics, but the local spatial structure such as an area’s built environment can also affect the obesity rate. This study analyzes and discusses how a greenbelt plan as a tool of urban containment policy has an effect on obesity. This study conducted spatial econometric regression models with five factors (13 variables) including transportation, socio-economic, public health, region, and policy factors. The relationship was analyzed between two policy effects of a greenbelt (i.e., a green buffer zone) and obesity. The variables for two policy effects of greenbelt zones are the size of the greenbelt and the inside and outside areas of the greenbelt. The results indicate that the two variables have negative effects on obesity. The results of the analyses in this study have several policy implications. Greenbelts play a role as an urban growth management policy, leading to a reduced obesity rate due to the influence of the transportation mode. In addition, greenbelts can also reduce the obesity rate because they provide recreation spaces for people.
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Jeong, Hae-Young. "A legal review of greenbelt regulation improvement plan: A Review the adequacy of the greenbelt system and the housing site supply plan, such as Bogeumjari housing." Korean Public Land Law Association 102 (May 31, 2023): 61–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.30933/kpllr.2023.102.61.

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Greenbelt policy started as needs to regulate and manage excessive city expansion rose. Greenbelt have not been newly designated in the past 50 years and have been released according to occasional needs. It was lifted to secure land, mainly to supply housing. There are several legal issues with the supply of housing using greenbelts as well as The Bogeumjari Housing. First, A large part of the Bogeumjari Housing Project is the supply of pre-sale housing. There is a fundamental problem in the public interest of the project in that it is a policy to promote housing stability for the low-income class by releasing a considerable amount of greenbelt. Second, although the release of the greenbelt is an important matter for the people's property rights and the balanced development and preservation of national land, there is a problem that the legal basis for the cancellation of the greenbelt for housing supply is not clear. Lastly, although the legal basis for the restoration of the greenbelt has been established, the question of the legitimacy of the restoration still remains. Although the release of greenbelts with low conservation value and supplying them to public housing areas can be seen as a weakening of public necessity at the time of designation of Bogeumjari housing districts, it is a logical contradiction that it is restored to a greenbelt due to the deterioration of the real estate market. The importance of preserving the greenbelt is further revealed in that the expansion of environmental capacity is important for urban growth management. In a situation where the concept of ‘sustainable development’ has emerged as an important issue in national land policy, it is necessary to develop and manage the greenbelt in a balanced manner under national consensus and mid- to long-term plans.
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Jeong, Hae-Young. "A legal review of greenbelt regulation improvement plan: A Review the adequacy of the greenbelt system and the housing site supply plan, such as Bogeumjari housing." Korean Public Land Law Association 102 (May 31, 2023): 61–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.30933/kpllr.2023.102.61.

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Greenbelt policy started as needs to regulate and manage excessive city expansion rose. Greenbelt have not been newly designated in the past 50 years and have been released according to occasional needs. It was lifted to secure land, mainly to supply housing. There are several legal issues with the supply of housing using greenbelts as well as The Bogeumjari Housing. First, A large part of the Bogeumjari Housing Project is the supply of pre-sale housing. There is a fundamental problem in the public interest of the project in that it is a policy to promote housing stability for the low-income class by releasing a considerable amount of greenbelt. Second, although the release of the greenbelt is an important matter for the people's property rights and the balanced development and preservation of national land, there is a problem that the legal basis for the cancellation of the greenbelt for housing supply is not clear. Lastly, although the legal basis for the restoration of the greenbelt has been established, the question of the legitimacy of the restoration still remains. Although the release of greenbelts with low conservation value and supplying them to public housing areas can be seen as a weakening of public necessity at the time of designation of Bogeumjari housing districts, it is a logical contradiction that it is restored to a greenbelt due to the deterioration of the real estate market. The importance of preserving the greenbelt is further revealed in that the expansion of environmental capacity is important for urban growth management. In a situation where the concept of ‘sustainable development’ has emerged as an important issue in national land policy, it is necessary to develop and manage the greenbelt in a balanced manner under national consensus and mid- to long-term plans.
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Zhang, Lin Ying, Yan Rong Jiang, and Hai Xia Zhao. "Research on Comprehensive Evaluation on Campus Greenbelt Landscape and Satisfaction." Applied Mechanics and Materials 584-586 (July 2014): 668–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.584-586.668.

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It is still a challenge to make a comprehensive evaluation on greenbelt landscapes of universities, which would lay a solid basis to improve the quality and ecological effects of greenbelts and enhance the satisfaction of people in these universities. Aiming at this problem, a comprehensive evaluation approach based on entropy method was proposed to make the evaluation be more actual and precise. Some related indexes, such as greenbelt coverage, temperature, and humidity, etc. are combined with the evaluation method. Taking the greenbelt landscapes of the nine universities in Guangzhou as research objects, the results show the effectiveness of our proposal, and some significant suggestions are provided to promote the in-depth construction of greenbelt landscapes of universities.
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Lu, Qing Yi, Li Qun Chen, and Xiang Kang. "Innovative Design of a New Water-Saving Greenbelt Cleaning Device." Advanced Materials Research 823 (October 2013): 184–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.823.184.

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With respect to serious water waste and backward cleaning devices relevant to the cleaning of road greenbelts, this paper describes an independently-designed water-saving greenbelt cleaning device with performance of energy saving and emission reduction. After the device is developed, relevant cleaning experiments are conducted on the gardening vehicles. The results show that the new water-saving greenbelt cleaning device can improve the efficiency of water utilization significantly.
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Lee, C.-M., and M. Fujita. "Efficient Configuration of a Greenbelt: Theoretical Modelling of Greenbelt Amenity." Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 29, no. 11 (November 1997): 1999–2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/a291999.

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In this paper we examine the relationships between the types of amenities generated by a greenbelt and the efficient location of a greenbelt. This analysis illuminates the research question of whether urban development beyond a greenbelt could be efficient in an economic sense. The Herbert-Stevens model of spatial efficiency is used to see what economic-efficiency conditions might justify the leapfrogging of urban development over the greenbelt. Some interesting results are produced. When a greenbelt generates a distance-independent level of service, the efficient location of the greenbelt should be outside the urban fringe, and there is no discontinuity between the land rents of the urbanized area and the greenbelt area along the inner boundary of a greenbelt. Conversely, when a greenbelt generates a distance-decaying level of services, (1) a central park type of greenbelt is not an optimal location of the greenbelt in our model setting; (2) there is discontinuity in land rent at the inner boundary of the greenbelt so that outside the urban fringe is an efficient location for the greenbelt, and (3) development jumping over the greenbelt, or a greenbelt inside the urbanized area, could be efficient as citizen's real income, required utility level, desire for greenbelt amenities, and total population increase, and the greenbelt provides amenities with a strong distance-decaying nature.
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Wu, Yizhou, Wentao Li, Jiacheng Yang, Siqin Wu, Heyuan You, Shenyan Wu, Xin Wu, and Xuxu Guo. "Simulation-Based Optimisation for Urban Environmental Noise Coupled with Auditory and Visual Subjective Evaluation." Complexity 2020 (August 7, 2020): 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/6958367.

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Environmental noise has a major negative impact, causing interference for people to communicate, rest, sleep, and general annoyance. In order to control urban environmental noise, simulation-based optimisation for urban environmental noise is conducted. On the basis of the current acoustic environment of Zhaohui Campus of Zhejiang University of Technology, three optimisation plans that include noise barrier optimisation, greenbelt optimisation, and a combination optimisation of noise barrier and greenbelt are proposed. These scenarios are simulated using NoiseSystem software to obtain their ability to reduce noise and determine auditory perception by using different control measures. To determine the visual perception of the optimisation plan, 100 people of different age groups were randomly selected, and each person scored the noise barrier and the greenbelt in the simulated scenarios. Results of the comprehensive evaluation of auditory and visual perception show that noise barriers can provide better auditory feelings, but greenbelts can provide a better auditory and visual subjective experience. Therefore, in addition to the application of noise control measures, their visual design must be fully considered. Moreover, the visual perception of plants is stronger than that of others.
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Zhang, Hu Zhu, and Hui Min Li. "Influencing Factors Analysis on Sunken Greenbelt Design of Urban Road." Applied Mechanics and Materials 638-640 (September 2014): 1158–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.638-640.1158.

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In order to provide scientific basis for the design parameters’ selection of sunken greenbelt of urban road, computational formulae of critical sunken depth and sunken greenbelt plant’s submergence time were derived based on the storage-infiltration analysis of sunken greenbelt. And then the influence of various factors on the sunken greenbelt design of urban road were computed and analyzed. Results show that: soil infiltration coefficient, design recurrence interval of storm and sunken greenbelt plant’s submergence time are the key influencing factors on the sunken greenbelt design. Under the same condition, critical sunken depth decreases linearly with the increase of soil infiltration coefficient, and increases nonlinearly with the increase of design recurrence interval of storm. Sunken greenbelt plant’s submergence time is proportional to sunken depth of sunken greenbelt, and it is inversely proportional to soil infiltration coefficient. When the value of soil infiltration coefficient is greater than 10-6m/s and the sunken depth range from 0 to 0.25 meters, submergence time of sunken greenbelt plants is all within 70h, and the sunken greenbelt can most infiltrate the rainfall storage in 1d. Considering all the influencing factors, soil infiltration coefficient of sunken greenbelt of urban road should be greater than10-6m/s and the appropriate sunken depth should be range from 0 to 0.25 meters.
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Wu, Wen Ting, Yi Ren, Heng Yu Zhao, Dan Shen, and Mi Mi Tian. "The Substance Quantity and Value Quantity Calculation Method Discussion for Soil Nourishment of Urban Greenbelt." Advanced Materials Research 403-408 (November 2011): 5294–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.403-408.5294.

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Water loss and soil erosion will cause damage of city land resource, result in deterioration of ecological environment and maladjustment of ecology balance, so it will influence national economy and social development. The soil nourishment function of land greenbelt is the important part of ecological service function of urban greenbelt, precisely calculate the substance quantity and value quantity of nourishment soil of urban greenbelt is one of the important basis to scientifically determine value of urban greenbelt and evaluate resource and asset of urban greenbelt, it is also the important basis to realize city ecological civilization and sustainable development. Currently, there are fewer research of calculation methods for substance quantity and value quantity for soil nourishment of urban greenbelt, it has not formed relative calculation method suitable for urban greenbelt calculation method with popular meaning, comparatively uniform, suitable for water self-restraint suitable for soil nourishment of urban greenbelt This article will discuss the connotation, index of soil nourishment of urban greenbelt, as well as calculation method of corresponding substance quantity and value quantity, it has important inspiration and reference meaning to scientifically carry out the effective calculation and management optimization of ecological service function of soil nourishment in urban greenbelt.
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Zhang, Hu Zhu, Hui Min Li, and Gui Fei Wei. "Storage-Infiltration Effect of Rainfall for Sunken Greenbelt in Urban Road." Advanced Materials Research 838-841 (November 2013): 1216–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.838-841.1216.

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In order to study the storage-infiltration effect of rainfall for sunken greenbelt in urban road, its storage-infiltration capacity of rainfall runoff was analyzed based on the rainfall balance equation of urban road in the time interval, and then the computational formulae of storage-infiltration rate was derived. Influence factors on storage-infiltration rate, such as design recurrence interval of rainfall, soil infiltration coefficient, greenbelt rate, and depth of sunken greenbelt, etc. were computed and analyzed by using the derived computational formulae with the rainfall intensity of Changchun city. Results show that: on the same condition, storage-infiltration rate of rainfall for sunken greenbelt in urban road increases linearly with the increase of soil infiltration coefficient, greenbelt rate, and depth of sunken greenbelt, and decreases with the increase of design recurrence interval of rainfall. Sunken greenbelt with depth of 0.05 ~ 0.25m can storage-infiltrate all of the rainfall that falls on the urban road when the greenbelt rate of urban road ranges from 20% to 40%. Eco-design program of sunken greenbelt in urban road is reasonable and feasible, and its storage-infiltration effect of rainfall is remarkable.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Greenbelt"

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Woodruff, Debra. "Globe Greenbelt Renews a Town." College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ), 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/295712.

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Haydu, Brandon. "City of Davis Greenbelt Master Plan." DigitalCommons@CalPoly, 2010. https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/270.

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The City of Davis is currently updating its Parks and Recreation Facilities Master Plan. During the update, greenbelts were identified as a highly used and desired facility. This Greenbelt Master Plan serves as a plan focused on the opportunities greenbelts can provide as recreational and transportation facilities. This report has analyzed community feedback, greenbelt coverage, greenbelt capacity, and existing local, state, and federal design guidelines. The final plan is a set of goals, objectives, policies, and programs, along with a greenbelt map, which is aimed at improving the greenbelt infrastructure in Davis through the year 2020.
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Martin, Edward Johnson. "Super GTA: Urban Implications of Ontario's Greenbelt." Thesis, University of Waterloo, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10012/2845.

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In early 2005, increasing social and infrastructural costs associated with the rapidly expanding Greater Toronto Area [GTA] pressed the Province of Ontario to initiate a growth management strategy for the region. The Provincial Growth Plan, coupled with its Greenbelt Plan, effectively legislates a minimum of 40 per cent infill development by 2015 and limits land supply until 2031. This book explores the extents and implications of this legislation, with a particular focus on the Town of Milton, a key community west of downtown Toronto, where city and Greenbelt meet.
    The structure of suburban communities can and should be modified to improve their sense of identity, and reduce their environmental impact and dependency on automobiles. The thesis aims to reflect the policies inherent in the Provincial Growth Plan, which advocates placing walkable infill development in close proximity to public transit. A design proposal links natural corridors and recreational spaces with a public thoroughfare along the existing railway line in Milton, Ontario. A dense new community flanks this public armature which connects the public realm network of this rapidly developing town to the larger network of the Metropolitan Greenbelt.
    The Town of Milton becomes a test case for scenarios which are common within the GTA, and examines the human impact on environmental systems moving towards symbiosis. The context of this city-building predicts a fundamental conceptual shift in the priorities of urban living, where residents understand the value of the natural environment and their relationship to it. That is to say, its context is one in which nature matters.
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Adkin, Kevin R. "India's 'Garden City'? Bangalore's disappearing greenbelt green to gone /." Access to citation, abstract and download form provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company; downloadable PDF file, 183 p, 2009. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1694328971&sid=5&Fmt=2&clientId=8331&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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Wake, David. "A Greenbelt for Perth: A strategy for managing urban growth." Thesis, Wake, David (1997) A Greenbelt for Perth: A strategy for managing urban growth. Honours thesis, Murdoch University, 1997. https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/41532/.

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The size and spatial organisation of cities is an important issue for urban policy. Urban sprawl is generating environmental, social and economic impacts which show it is not sustainable. Urban growth needs to be managed and contained. The greenbelt concept is important in this context. This thesis investigates the potential of greenbelts for urban growth management. The greenbelt concept is reviewed and its relevance to managing urban growth and promoting sustainability considered. Case studies are included of cities with greenbelts or similar strategies. The potential of a greenbelt for managing growth in metropolitan Perth, Western Australia, is considered. A greenbelt is a zone of land around a city set aside from urban development. It involves maintaining an urban growth boundary and managing rural land use around it. A greenbelt can be a strategy to limit sprawl, shape urban form and protect rural environs. To be effective a greenbelt must be integrated with other strategies to affect where and how development occurs and make cities more sustainable. Perth is a sprawling city experiencing urban growth problems and is headed toward continued expansion. Rural landscapes and natural resources are destined to become car dependent suburbia. To avoid tWs situation growth management is needed, guided by a positive vision of a sustainable city and region wherein the environment is protected and livability enhanced. A greenbelt could be part of that vision and an integral strategy influencing land use in metropolitan Perth. A greenbelt can set a growth boundary - a limit that challenges past growth patterns and requires more critical use of urban space. A greenbelt could help shift growth away from the fringe and focus development in defined areas within or beyond the city. The greenbelt is a positive idea for managing change for a sustainable future. It is a radical idea given current trends, but one that should be developed further. TWs thesis raises some issues for consideration.
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Turner, Julie D. "To Make America Over: The Greenbelt Towns of the New Deal." Miami University / OhioLINK, 2010. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=miami1270068260.

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Rojas, Bustos Mauricio, and Brito Juan Francisco Rozas. "Greenbelt, empresa recicladora y productora de alternativas ecológicas para el medio ambiente." Tesis, Universidad de Chile, 2014. http://www.repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/117580.

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Tesis para optar al grado de Magíster en Administración
Autor no autoriza el acceso a texto completo [Parte I] de su documento.
Rojas Bustos, Mauricio [Parte I] y Rozas Brito, Juan Francisco [Parte II]
Oportunidades que atiende: Necesidad de implementación de áreas verdes en sectores comunes y de esparcimiento. Las grandes brechas respecto a las recomendaciones de la Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) en relación a la cantidad de metros cuadrados de áreas verdes por habitante genera la oportunidad en el suministro de material base y complementario para aplicaciones de jardinería, áreas comunes y paisajismo de los proyectos inmobiliarios tanto de departamento y condominios existentes y futuros. Se suma a esto, la oportunidad de cubrir un espacio de mercado potencial enfocado a clientes que buscan alternativas más económicas en el costo de mantenimiento en comparación con lo que ofrece el pasto natural. Además, el caucho granulado de Greenbelt hace parques infantiles y áreas de juego mucho más seguras, proporcionando protección contra caídas. Por último, y como oportunidad secundaria, cabe mencionar la gran tasa de generación de cintas transportadoras en desuso, producto del recambio en toda la gran y mediana minería del país. Existe la oportunidad de ofrecer un servicio para facilitar la gestión de desecho de las plantas mineras, contribuir con la estrategia de sustentabilidad y medio ambiente. Idea de negocios: Greenbelt es una empresa recicladora de desechos mineros. El objetivo de la empresa consiste en utilizar métodos de reciclaje de correas transportadoras en desuso, procesarlas y comercializar un producto final de caucho granulado con fines decorativos para espacios públicos. Mercado objetivo: El mercado objetivo son las empresas inmobiliarias que desarrollan proyectos de vivienda. Además, en el sector público, el producto se enfoca en las entidades municipales y gubernamentales a cargo de los parques urbanos, plazas y lugares de esparcimiento para la comunidad. Propuesta de valor: • Disminución en los costos de mantenimiento de parques, plazas y lugares públicos. • Parques infantiles seguros (recubrimiento de suelo) a través de superficies limpias, coloridas y disminuye la gravedad de lesiones. Vendemos nuestro producto a través de diseños personalizados y con instalación incluida acorde al entorno. Descripción de la empresa: “Greenbelt” es una empresa que surge a partir de la búsqueda de soluciones para el manejo de desechos de cintas transportadoras de la gran minería, y la generación de alternativas de utilización de los productos que resulten de su procesamiento. La empresa cuenta con un servicio de retiro de las cintas trasportadoras en desuso que servirán como abastecimiento para el proceso productivo que consiste en la trituración de las correas y su preparación en los distintos formatos finales para su presentación a los clientes. Un departamento proyectista genera modelos virtuales y presta asesorías a los clientes para las aplicaciones del producto final.
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Hoffman, Karl W. "Riparian Forest Width and the Avian Community in a Greenbelt Corridor Setting." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2001. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc2757/.

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The forest avian community of the Ray Roberts Greenbelt (Denton Co., Texas) was characterized for two years using point count station sampling, from fall 1998 to summer 2000. Richness data for both breeding seasons were correlated with two-spatial metrics: width of the riparian forest and distance to the nearest edge. There were significant correlations between forest interior species richness and both spatial metrics, for both breeding seasons. Based on these data, a minimum riparian forest width threshold of 400-meters is suggested to provide habitat for forest interior species, which have lost considerable habitat through forest fragmentation. Partners in Flight breeding bird priority concern scores were used to create a habitat priority index for the Trinity River bottomland hardwood forest system
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Kerns, Jennifer K. "A social experiment in Greenbelt, Maryland: Class, gender, and public housing, 1935-1954." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280110.

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Through the historical analysis of a public housing project built in Greenbelt, Maryland in 1937, this dissertation investigates how federal housing policies attempted to impose middle-class gender roles and relations on members of the working-class as a central means to alleviate class tensions heightened during the Great Depression. Informed by recent developments in Women's History and the Social History of Architecture, this project examines how attempts to rehabilitate working-class families and communities necessitated removing them from cities and imposing paradigmatic gender norms. A new form of housing and town-planning became a critical means to achieve these ends. This federal housing project in Greenbelt has long been celebrated as the first successful example of federal support for progressive urban planning. The planners of Greenbelt drew from existing progressive ideologies that understood decentralized communities, or suburbs, as the answer to the decay and squalor of urban centers. Viewing Greenbelt solely in terms of its progressive legacy is limiting, however, unless that legacy is investigated using class, race, and gender analysis. With the planning, design, and administration of the new community in Greenbelt, New Deal planners envisioned a new form of architecture, town-planning and administration that would provide a social and physical environment conducive to the formation of viable, stable, working-class families. These planners assumed that if working-class residents adopted the gender relations that were normative in the middle-class, long term problems of poverty and social disorder would disappear. The built environment of Greenbelt, contemporary photographs, and federal administrative records provide significant evidence to study the relationship between "class rehabilitation" and gender norms. This project offers a new approach to understanding the New Deal housing policies and the construction of a domestic ideal.
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Matsubayashi, Shiho. "Quantifying Forest Vertical Structure to Determine Bird Habitat Quality in the Greenbelt Corridor, Denton, Tx." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2013. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc283803/.

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This study presents the integration of light detection and range (LiDAR) and hyperspectral remote sensing to create a three-dimensional bird habitat map in the Greenbelt Corridor of the Elm Fork of the Trinity River. This map permits to examine the relationship between forest stand structure, landscape heterogeneity, and bird community composition. A biannual bird census was conducted at this site during the breeding seasons of 2009 and 2010. Census data combined with the three-dimensional map suggest that local breeding bird abundance, community structure, and spatial distribution patterns are highly influenced by vertical heterogeneity of vegetation surface. For local breeding birds, vertical heterogeneity of canopy surface within stands, connectivity to adjacent forest patches, largest forest patch index, and habitat (vegetation) types proved to be the most influential factors to determine bird community assemblages. Results also highlight the critical role of secondary forests to increase functional connectivity of forest patches. Overall, three-dimensional habitat descriptions derived from integrated LiDAR and hyperspectral data serve as a powerful bird conservation tool that shows how the distribution of bird species relates to forest composition and structure at various scales.
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Books on the topic "Greenbelt"

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Ontario. Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing., ed. Greenbelt Plan. [Toronto]: Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing, 2005.

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United States. National Park Service, ed. Greenbelt: Official map and guide : Greenbelt Park, Maryland. [Washington, D.C.?]: The Service, 1990.

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Parliament, Great Britain. Greenbelt Protection Bill. London: Stationery Office, 2003.

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Berger, Howard S. Greenbelt Historic District study. Upper Marlboro, Md: The Commission, 1994.

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Sims, Veronica. Ontario's greenbelt: A resource for teachers. [Toronto, ON]: Ontario Ministry of Tourism and Recreation, 2006.

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Carter-Whitney, Maureen. Ontario's Greenbelt in an international context: Comparing Ontario's Greenbelt to its counterparts in Europe and North America. Toronto, Ont: Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation, 2008.

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Cooper, Donald H. The Greenbelt co-operative: Success and decline. Davis, Calif: Center for Cooperatives, University of California, 1992.

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M, Collins James. The Iowa River Greenbelt: An archaeological landscape. Iowa City: University of Iowa, 1991.

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Technical University of Nova Scotia. Dept. of Urban and Rural Planning. and Technical University of Nova Scotia. Faculty of Architecture., eds. The Ottawa Greenbelt: A land use proposal. Halifax, N.S: Resource Centre Publications, Faculty of Architecture, Technical University of Nova Scotia, 1992.

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Thomas, Levine Robert, and Greenbelt Writers Group, eds. Genius loci: 1996 Greenbelt Writers Group anthology. Greenbelt, MD (c/o Greenbelt Community Center, 15 Crescent Rd., Greenbelt, 20770): Greenbelt Writers Group, 1996.

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Book chapters on the topic "Greenbelt"

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Orive, Luis Andrés, and Rebeca Dios Lema. "Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain: From Urban Greenbelt to Regional Green Infrastructure." In Green Cities of Europe, 155–80. Washington, DC: Island Press/Center for Resource Economics, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-175-7_7.

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Han, Haoying, and Haifeng Xu. "Curbing Urban Sprawl?—The Evolvement and Influences of the Greenbelt Policy in Seoul." In Proceedings of the 20th International Symposium on Advancement of Construction Management and Real Estate, 215–27. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-0855-9_19.

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Greenberg, Jeff. "Greenberg, Jeff." In Encyclopedia of Personality and Individual Differences, 1835–43. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-24612-3_1733.

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Chambert-Loir, Antoine, Johannes Nicaise, and Julien Sebag. "Greenberg Schemes." In Progress in Mathematics, 211–62. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-7887-8_4.

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Goldman, Rhonda N. "Greenberg, Leslie." In Encyclopedia of Couple and Family Therapy, 1334–35. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-49425-8_794.

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Kampmann, Elisabeth. "Greenberg, Clement." In Kindlers Literatur Lexikon (KLL), 1. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05728-0_1637-1.

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Goldman, Rhonda N. "Greenberg, Leslie." In Encyclopedia of Couple and Family Therapy, 1–3. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-15877-8_794-1.

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Greenberg, Jeff. "Greenberg, Jeff." In Encyclopedia of Personality and Individual Differences, 1–9. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-28099-8_1733-1.

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Chaphekar, S. B. "Greenbelts for Industrial Areas." In Environmental Stress: Indication, Mitigation and Eco-conservation, 431–43. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-9532-2_38.

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Feinberg, Anat. "Greenberg, Uri Zwi." In Kindlers Literatur Lexikon (KLL), 1. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-05728-0_7545-1.

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Conference papers on the topic "Greenbelt"

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Zhao, Yandong, Chenxiang Bai, and Bo Zhao. "An Automatic Control System of Precision Irrigation for City Greenbelt." In 2007 2nd IEEE Conference on Industrial Electronics and Applications. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iciea.2007.4318763.

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Yang Jiudong, Wu Fenghua, Gan Deqing, Dong Jun, and Dai Jingping. "Research of urban greenbelt monitoring based on GPS and RS data." In 2010 2nd International Conference on Information Science and Engineering (ICISE). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icise.2010.5691969.

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Tang, Daijian, and Qian Cheng. "Monitoring the greenbelt dynamic of tourist city Hangzhou based on remote sensing." In Remote Sensing, edited by Ulrich Michel and Daniel L. Civco. SPIE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.868630.

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Russell, Edgar D. "Survey of Lidar Systems." In Inaugural Forum for the Research Center for Optical Physics. Washington, D.C.: Optica Publishing Group, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/rcop.1993.tpl122.

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For this work, we have gathered information concerning the physical layout and some uses of Lidar systems. Uses for Lidar systems include atmospheric science, for the purpose of weather prediction, to laser altimeter systems that may be used in mapping the Moon and Mars in future space missions. The collected information was obtained from the Laboratory for Terrestrial Physics' (LTP) atmospheric science branch, code 920, at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
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"A Spatial Hedonic Analysis of the Value of the Greenbelt in the City of Vienna, Austria." In 20th Annual European Real Estate Society Conference: ERES Conference 2013. ÖKK-Editions, Vienna, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.15396/eres2013_337.

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Ludwig, Ryan. "Rewriting the Dream: Beyond Sustainable Sub-urban Living and the Potentials of the Productive Landscape." In 109th ACSA Annual Meeting Paper Proceedings. ACSA Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.am.109.75.

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This paper argues for a beyond sustainable approach to sub-urban living, rejecting the postwar Levitt style single-family home of the American Dream, to instead consider alternative futures founded on new ideas of community. It questions how architecture may engender lasting opportuni¬ties for resilient and eco-egalitarian approaches to sub-urban life, while simultaneously meeting the fundamental needs of its inhabitants. This beyond sustainable rewriting of the Dream suggests a less individualized, more collaborative, more inclusive notion of sub-urban living, questioning many typical arrangements of inside/outside, front/back, public/ private, production/consumption, individual/collective, etc., as seen in American sub-urban tract housing. It will utilize the concept of the productive landscape conceived as a cata-lyst for reconstituting the production of food, water, energy, recreation and social interactions. This approach is illustrated through the work of several third-year undergraduate design studios taught in recent years at the University of Cincinnati, School of Architecture which maintained similar beyond sustainable ambitions. The location for these tests has been Greenhills, OH, one of three “Greenbelt Towns” built as part of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal Resettlement Administration. While Greenhills was envisioned largely as a response to the question of urban and rural poverty, today, the expanded role of the car, neoliberal global commerce and the increased expectations of comfort and convenience of sub-urban life, alongside its aging, out¬dated and undersized existing housing stock, have resulted in its decline as a desirable sub-urban living destination. However, its original small-scale walkable planning, many tree lined gently curving streets and cul-de-sacs, central park green, and still intact greenbelt provide substantive com¬munity assets from which to consider a beyond sustainable model of sub-urban living, especially in a world undergoing radical change due to anthropogenic global warming, cli¬mate destabilization and ecological degradation for which the postwar Levitt style suburb has contributed greatly. In this way its specific history and current shortcomings make Greenhills a timely locale for testing alternative approaches to sub-urban living and indirectly the city.
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THOMAS, ANDREW. "Augusta UHI and Lightning Prediction at Savannah River Site." In Name: Goddard Earth Sciences Data and Information Services Center Users Working Group Face-toFace Meeting, Location: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, 8800 Greenbelt Rd, Greenbelt, MD 20771, Date Range: 09/20/2023-09/21/2023. US DOE, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/2008459.

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Chen, Lixin, and Wenbiao Duan. "Notice of Retraction: Heavy Metal Contamination of Soils and Its Evaluation in Different Greenbelt Functional Region of Harbin, China." In 2011 5th International Conference on Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering. IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icbbe.2011.5781363.

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Wellemeyer, Charles G., Ramdas R. Singh, Richard D. McPeters, and Robert D. Hudson. "Comparison of Re-calibrated TOMS Total Ozone Data with Dobson Network." In Optical Remote Sensing of the Atmosphere. Washington, D.C.: Optica Publishing Group, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/orsa.1990.wa8.

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Nine years of reprocessed Version 6 total ozone data from the Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) are compared with selected subsets of the Dobson ground based Network. A small long-term drift of -0.11 ± 0.09 %/yr (95% confidence) is identified in the first nine years of TOMS data relative to Dobson. This small change in bias (amounting to 1% over the nine year period) is of the order of the long-term stability of the calibration of both measurement systems. However, a possible mechanism for the drift is identified. Changes in tropospheric ozone are only partly measured by the backscattered ultraviolet (BUV) method [Klenk et al., 1982]. Based on recent estimates of the change in tropospheric ozone [Bojkov, 1987] and of the BUV sensitivity to changes in tropospheric ozone [Fleig et al., 1989], about half of the observed drift would be attributed to this effect. The reprocessed Version 6 TOMS data set is available through the National Space Science Data Center, GSFC/NASA, Greenbelt Maryland.
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Campbell, Petya, Phil Townsend, Dan Mandl, and James MacKinnon. "Automated Uas Measurements of Reflectance and Solar Induced Florescence (SIF) for Assessment Of the Dinamics in Photosynthetic Function, Application for Maze (Zea Mays L.) in Greenbelt, Maryland, Us." In IGARSS 2021 - 2021 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium. IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/igarss47720.2021.9554902.

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Reports on the topic "Greenbelt"

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ARMY ENGINEER DISTRICT ROCK ISLAND IL. Des Moines Recreational River and Greenbelt Feature Design Memorandum Number 8 with Environmental Assessment. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, August 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada264305.

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Ross, James S., Jane K. Johnston, Jeffrey D. Anderson, Michael J. McNerney, and Mary R. McCorvie. Archaeological and Geomorphological Investigations at the Proposed Greenbelt Project, Des Moines, Iowa. Phase 2. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, September 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada241709.

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Wiehagen, J., M. Del Bianco, and A. Wood. Greenbelt Homes Pilot Energy Efficiency Program Phase 1 Summary. Existing Conditions and Baseline Energy Use. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), February 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1219916.

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ARMY ENGINEER DISTRICT ROCK ISLAND IL. Annual Program Management Report 1989: Des Moines Recreational River and Greenbelt, Des Moines River, Iowa. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, October 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada251012.

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ARMY ENGINEER DISTRICT ROCK ISLAND IL. Annual Program Management Report (1990), Des Moines Recreational River and Greenbelt, Des Moines River, Iowa. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, December 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada251532.

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Hoffman, L., and G. B. Parker. Preliminary assessment of energy conservation opportunities at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), July 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/10178833.

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Wiehagen, J., M. Del Bianco, and A. Wood. Greenbelt Homes Pilot Energy Efficiency Program Phase 1 Summary: Existing Conditions and Baseline Energy Use. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), February 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1067914.

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Wiehagen, J., M. Del Bianco, and D. Mallay. Greenbelt Homes Pilot Program: Summary of Building Envelope Retrofits, Planned HVAC Equipment Upgrades, and Energy Savings. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), May 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1220460.

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Wiehagen, J., M. Del Bianco, and D. Mallay. Greenbelt Homes Pilot Program. Summary of Building Envelope Retrofits, Planned HVAC Equipment Upgrades, and Energy Savings. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), May 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1215112.

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ARMY ENGINEER DISTRICT ROCK ISLAND IL. Annual Program Management Report 1989: Des Moines Recreational River and Greenbelt, Des Moines River, Iowa. Plates. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, October 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada251013.

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