Academic literature on the topic 'Naturalistic landscapes'

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Journal articles on the topic "Naturalistic landscapes"

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Zadegan, Yousef R., Bridget K. Behe, and Robert Gough. "Consumer Preferences for Native Plants in Montana Residential Landscapes and Perceptions for Naturalistic Designs." Journal of Environmental Horticulture 26, no. 2 (June 1, 2008): 109–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.24266/0738-2898-26.2.109.

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Abstract In a preliminary study, consumer perceptions of native plants in traditional and naturalistic settings was investigated. In Montana, 361 participants in an internet study reported their familiarity with both woody and herbaceous native plant species. Additional data were collected to determine their perceptions of native plants used in naturalistic designs through a conjoint study. Nearly half of the study participants recognized or had purchased most of the native plants shown in photographs. Results of the conjoint study showed that participants placed the greatest relative importance (62%) on landscape style as the most important factor in landscape design. They also preferred a naturalistic style over a more traditional style and mixed plant species to single species. Across all comparisons, the high relative importance of landscape style remained constant and was consistent with prior studies. Plant material (21.9%) and species diversity (16.2%) were half the relative importance of design style and remained relatively consistent through most comparisons. Even among those participants not familiar with native plants and those who had not purchased native plants, native plants were preferred in the landscapes. The demand for native plants may be reaching a critical stage for both commercial growers and the landscape profession. Although this study was limited to one state, results show that consumer interest is present and further investigation is warranted.
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Özgüner, H., A. D. Kendle, and R. J. Bisgrove. "Attitudes of landscape professionals towards naturalistic versus formal urban landscapes in the UK." Landscape and Urban Planning 81, no. 1-2 (May 2007): 34–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.landurbplan.2006.10.002.

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Alexandre, Fernando Da Silva, Ana Lúcia Bezerra Candeias, and Daniel Dantas Moreira Gomes. "Modelagem cartográfica para a delimitação das paisagens da bacia hidrográfica do Alto Curso do Rio Mundaú - Pernambuco/Alagoas, Nordeste, Brasil." Revista Brasileira de Geografia Física 12, no. 7 (January 31, 2020): 2489. http://dx.doi.org/10.26848/rbgf.v12.7.p2489-2502.

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A noção de paisagem está presente na memória do ser humano antes mesmo da elaboração do conceito. As sínteses naturalistas concebem a natureza através de uma ordem natural que promove a organização da superfície terrestre a partir dos elementos internos e externos do globo, essa ordem está passível de analise, já que se espacializa em áreas naturais homogêneas, dotadas de uma hierarquia. A bacia hidrográfica é uma excelente opção de investigação, é um sistema aberto, dinâmico, onde ocorrem trocas constantes de matéria e energia. As bacias hidrográficas, na condição de unidades funcionais de planejamento, esguardam paisagens. Assim para a delimitação das paisagens do alto curso, buscou-se correlacionar os fatores geológico-geomorfológico com a climatologia da bacia, o que resultou na delimitação de 8 unidades de paisagens, sendo elas: caatingas secas em relevo dissecado em ravina, caatingas subúmidas em relevo dissecado convexo, matas úmidas em relevo convexo, matas úmidas em relevo dissecado aguçado, matas úmidas em relevo pediplano degradado inumado, matas úmidas em relevo tabular, atas subúmidas em relevo tabular e matas úmidas em relevo dissecado aguçado. Cartographic modeling of the delimitation of landscapes in watershed of the high course of the Mundaú River – Pernambuco / Alagoas, Northeastern, Brazil A B S T R A C TThe notion of landscape is present in human memory even before the elaboration of this concept. Naturalistic syntheses conceive nature through a natural order that promotes the organization of the earth's surface from the inner and outer elements of the globe. This order is subject to analysis, since it is spatialized in homogeneous natural areas, endowed with a hierarchy. The watershed is an excellent research option. It is an open, dynamic system where constant exchanges of matter and energy occur. Watersheds, as functional planning units, protect landscapes. Thus, for the delimitation of the landscapes of the upper course, we sought to correlate the geological-geomorphological factors with the climatology of the basin, which resulted in the delimitation of 8 landscape units, namely: dried dry caatingas in ravine, submerged caatingas in convex dissected relief, convex embossed wetlands, sharp dissected embossed wetlands, smoked degraded pediplane embossed woods, tabular embossed wetlands, tabular embossed wetlands and thickened dissected embossed wetlands.Keywords: landscape cartography, landscape units, geosystems, landscape mapping.
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Farbod, Sara, Mustafa Kamal, and Suhardi Maulan. "Safety perception and concerns in naturalistic landscapes of urban parks in Malaysia." Security Journal 30, no. 1 (January 2017): 106–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/sj.2014.15.

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Tarlow, Sarah. "Landscapes of memory: The nineteenth-century garden cemetery." European Journal of Archaeology 3, no. 2 (2000): 217–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/eja.2000.3.2.217.

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During the 1820s, 1830s and 1840s, garden cemeteries were founded in most cities in Britain. Their characteristic appearance owes much to a British tradition of naturalistic landscape design but has particular resonances in the context of death and mourning in the nineteenth century. This article considers some of the factors that have been significant in the development of the British landscape cemetery, including public health, class relationships and foreign influences (particularly that of Père Lachaise cemetery in Paris). It is argued that none of these things explains the popularity of this particular form of cemetery in Britain; rather, the garden cemetery offered an appealing and appropriate landscape for remembering the dead and mediating the relationship between the dead and the bereaved.
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Biegon, Glenn. "Caution—Objects Are Closer Than They Appear: Perspectively Inverted Pseudoscopic Images behind Accelerated Space." Leonardo 38, no. 3 (June 2005): 245–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/0024094054029029.

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Perspective inversion reverses the flow of naturalistic pictorial space, creating a disorienting, anti-naturalistic sense of space. Inverted perspective's subversive power appears limited, however, given that no art-historical examples depict fully inverted objects in systematically inverted “unlimited spaces,” such as landscapes. The author addresses this limitation through analysis of “converse” and “pseudoscopic” 3D images—Charles Wheat-stone's two paradigms for inverting binocular depth. Wheatstone's inverted imagery proves geometrically identical to 3D art-historical precedents that conceal their perspective inversion: namely, relief sculpture, set design and architecture employing three-dimensionally “forced” perspective. As hinted by depth-inverted stereograms, linear perspective employed together with reversed overlapping cues systematically inverts unlimited space in both 2D and 3D pictures.
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Özgüner, H., and A. D. Kendle. "Public attitudes towards naturalistic versus designed landscapes in the city of Sheffield (UK)." Landscape and Urban Planning 74, no. 2 (January 2006): 139–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.landurbplan.2004.10.003.

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CARTER, JENNIFER. "Displacing Indigenous Cultural Landscapes: the Naturalistic Gaze at Fraser Island World Heritage Area." Geographical Research 48, no. 4 (October 26, 2010): 398–410. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-5871.2010.00644.x.

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Cillis, Giuseppe, Dina Statuto, and Pietro Picuno. "Vernacular Farm Buildings and Rural Landscape: A Geospatial Approach for Their Integrated Management." Sustainability 12, no. 1 (December 18, 2019): 4. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12010004.

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Over the centuries, farm buildings, which accompany the development of agriculture, have played an important role in defining spatial and environmental planning. In some European countries in particular, these rural structures have been built based on traditional agricultural needs and typical land characteristics. Considering the land abandonment that has occurred over the last five decades, with farmers moving to more comfortable residences in neighboring urban settlements, historical farm buildings have often been abandoned, thus causing a leakage of the historical-cultural heritage of the rural landscape. Nowadays, open data and geographic technologies together with advanced technological tools allow us to gather multidisciplinary information about the specific characteristics of each farm building, thus improving our knowledge. This information can greatly support the protection of those buildings and landscapes that have high cultural and naturalistic value. In this paper, the potential of Geographic Information Systems to catalogue the farm buildings of the Basilicata region (Southern Italy) is explored. The analysis of these buildings, traditionally known as masserie, integrates some typical aspects of landscape studies, paving the way for sustainable management of the important cultural heritage represented by vernacular farm buildings and the rural landscape.
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Dushkova, Diana, and Maria Ignatieva. "New trends in urban environmental health research: from geography of diseases to therapeutic landscapes and healing gardens." GEOGRAPHY, ENVIRONMENT, SUSTAINABILITY 13, no. 1 (April 1, 2020): 159–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.24057/2071-9388-2019-99.

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Urban living style is associated with various negative impacts on human health, e.g. connected with the environmental problems. Thus, promoting health of urban population is nowadays one of the most challenging issues of the 21st century together with the growing needs for sustainable development and establishment of the biophilic or livable cities. It is increasing awareness among researchers and health practitioners of the potential benefits to the health from activities in natural settings and especially from regular contact with nature, which can be perceived as a preventive medical tool. This paper discusses the close relationship between the concepts of health-supporting landscapes and sustainability in modern cities based on literature review and case studies from EU, Russian and Australian projects. We first review the historical and modern paradigms (of the various disciplines) which determine the discourse in nature – human health and well-being research. This includes examination of Hippocrates «naturalistic history», Humboldt’s concept of natural garden design; Oertel ‘s ‘Terrain Kur’; «salutogenic approach» of Antonovsky; McHarg’s Design with Nature; Ecopolis programme, Wilson’s biophilia and some other approaches. Then there is a comparative analysis of structural similarities and differences in the past and current scientific schools devoted to understanding human – landscape interaction. One of the principal arguments is that nature also has another value for health, regardless of natural remedies. It includes, for example, the healing of space, outdoor training trails in parks, everyday use of urban green spaces and peri-urban recreation areas for sport and exercises. We provide an analysis of some examples based on the modern concepts of biophilic cities, therapeutic landscapes, healing gardens, green infrastructure and nature-based solutions. This article also discusses the main types of healing gardens and therapeutic landscapes and suggests the framework of design principles of healing and therapeutic landscapes. The analysis proved that healing gardens and therapeutic landscapes provide multiple benefits and can be regarded as nature-based solutions. These essential aspects of multifunctionality, multiculturality and social inclusion are well intertwined with the approach of biophilia.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Naturalistic landscapes"

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Ulrich, Amanda. "The aesthetics of naturalistic landscapes in civic spaces: a study of preference." Thesis, Kansas State University, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/6985.

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Master of Landscape Architecture
Department of Landscape Architecture/Regional and Community Planning
Timothy D. Keane
Naturalistic landscapes have increased in popularity, especially in the landscape architecture profession, due to the push for greener and more sustainable landscape designs in civic spaces. The increase in popularity and resulting use of naturalistic landscapes by landscape architects creates a need to understand users’ preferences for naturalistic landscapes. Users need to have moderate to high preference levels for the naturalistic landscape spaces in order for such spaces to be successful. This work identifies and explains civic spaces, characteristics of traditional landscape designs, characteristics and history of naturalistic landscapes, and characteristics and details of previous preference studies that focused on people’s preferences for natural areas. This study also identifies current preference levels and background characteristics of respondents, which are used to determine who does and does not prefer naturalistic landscapes in civic spaces and why. A survey questionnaire targeted toward users of naturalistic landscapes identified opinions, preferences, and statistical data relevant to this study. A total of sixty-one surveys were completed and collected from two separate survey sites. Survey results were used to determine: 1. Preference levels of the respondents. 2. Background characteristics and values of the respondents. 3. Correlations and patterns between respondents’ preference levels and their background characteristics. 4. Correlations and patterns between respondents’ preference levels and their values and opinions. 5. Differences between the results from the two survey sites. Survey results and analyses indicate that perceived safety is a major factor that influences preference levels. Background characteristics such as the level of formal education and the participation in classes and seminars that focus on topics relevant to naturalistic landscapes are also significant indicators of preference levels. Another of the indicators is the participation in outdoor activities of all sorts. Along with determining the indicators of preference levels, the survey results were used in the comparison of the results from the two survey locations.
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Ozguner, Halil. "Public and professional attitudes to naturalistic landscapes in urban areas." Thesis, University of Reading, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.390594.

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Song, Kyungsoo. "Documentation and demonstration of naturalistic method for measuring climate/behavior relationships." Thesis, This resource online, 1987. http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04122010-083558/.

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Hartley, Beryl. "The artist as naturalist and experimenter : landscape painting and science, 1740-1850." Thesis, Imperial College London, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/63784.

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This thesis discusses the relationship of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century British naturalistic landscape painting to the fieldwork and experimental practices of contemporary scientific endeavour. It argues that close study was essential to a naturalistic treatment and traces what this entailed in practical terms. Part I assesses some eighteenth-century field collaborations between artists and naturalists engaged in a variety of investigations from the 1740s, and the value of sketching to fieldwork. The significant effect of the naturalists' rigour and methodology on the artists' practice is revealed. Part II deals with the knowledge and representation of trees; of obvious importance in nature and landscape painting, they have been little discussed by historians of science or art. It demonstrates the unique role of landscape painters in the study of living trees. A survey of works on trees dating from midseventeenth century, resulting from a wide range of economic, aesthetic and scientific concerns, reveals an increasing demand for naturalistic drawings. The neglect of whole trees by botanists and their artists is explained and major changes in British botany around 1830 are shown to have ended it; the expertise of certain landscape painters was essential in providing depictions of living trees. In Part III an examination of eighty years of tree-drawing manuals by landscape painters helps to clarify the practical aspects of close study. The special and often innovative visual and manual skills acquired in the activity of tree drawing from nature, including the creation of a device - "the touch" - to express the characters of different foliage, are analysed in depth. The exploratory nature of this practice, and its embedded craft and tacit skills, are shown to be analagous to aspects of laboratory experimentation.
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Books on the topic "Naturalistic landscapes"

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Tregay, Robert. Design revisited: Formality and naturalistic expression in the design of nature-like landscapes. Alnarp: Institutionen för Landskapsplanering, Sveriges Lantbruksuniversitet, 1986.

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James, Hitchmough, ed. Dynamic Landscape: Design, Ecology and Management of Naturalistic Urban. London: Spon Press, 2004.

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Jane, Scott. Field and forest: A guide to native landscapes for gardeners and naturalists. New York: Walker, 1992.

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Scott, Jane. Field and forest: A guide to native landscapes for gardeners and naturalists. Caldwell, N.J: Blackburn Press, 2002.

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Kenfield, Warren G. Memorial edition of The wild gardener in the wild landscape: The art of naturalistic landscaping. New London, Conn: Connecticut College Arboretum, 1991.

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A secret landscape: Diary of Lapwing Meadows. London: Century, 1986.

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Benjamin, Perkins. A secret landscape: A diary of Lapwing Meadows. London: Century, 1986.

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Carl Gustav Carus: Sein Leben, seine Anschauung von der Erde. Stuttgart: Freies Geistesleben, 1986.

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Mangiavacchi, Maria. Arte e natura in Toscana: Gli elementi naturalistici e il paesaggio negli artisti dal Trecento al Cinquecento. Prato: CariPrato, 2002.

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Thoreau, Henry David. An American landscape. New York: Paragon House, 1991.

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Book chapters on the topic "Naturalistic landscapes"

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Tonder, Gert J. van. "Order and complexity in naturalistic landscapes." In Visual Thought, 257–301. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/aicr.67.18ton.

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Ewert, Alan W., Denise S. Mitten, and Jillisa R. Overholt. "Theories and concepts: linking landscapes and health." In Health and natural landscapes: concepts and applications, 38–51. Wallingford: CABI, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/9781789245400.0004.

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Abstract This book chapter provides an introduction and background information for many of these theories, concluding with practical applications, focusing on evolutionary-based theories (e.g. biophilia hypothesis, naturalistic intelligence, other evolutionary-grounded theories), restorative environment theories (stress reduction theory, attention restoration theory), identity theories, and other psychological theories and concepts. The ideas presented in this chapter arise from different ways of thinking about or explaining this phenomenon, using a particular language and worldview. A strength of the research paradigm is that it enables scientists and researchers to communicate about this engrained bodily knowledge and integrate it into ongoing theory and practice in disciplines such as medicine, public health, planning, and education that impact our day-to-day lives. Slowly but surely, Western scientific research has begun to accept other worldviews and ideas, and this diversity of thought provides greater understanding of the world around us. Much of the research presented in the next chapter builds on the foundation of the theories presented here.
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"Naturalistic Herbaceous Vegetation for Urban Landscapes." In The Dynamic Landscape, 178–251. Taylor & Francis, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203402870-11.

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"Introduction to Naturalistic Planting in Urban Landscapes." In The Dynamic Landscape, 7–38. Taylor & Francis, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203402870-6.

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Schuyler, David. "The Naturalist’s River." In Sanctified Landscape, 133–50. Cornell University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9780801450808.003.0008.

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"The naturalistic landscape of Warrington." In Competitive Tendering - Management and Reality, 57–65. Routledge, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203477250-15.

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"park [n], naturalistic." In Encyclopedic Dictionary of Landscape and Urban Planning, 664. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-76435-9_9080.

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"3677 naturalistic [adj]." In Encyclopedic Dictionary of Landscape and Urban Planning, 608. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-76435-9_8371.

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"naturalistic park [n]." In Encyclopedic Dictionary of Landscape and Urban Planning, 608. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-76435-9_8373.

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"Communicating Naturalistic Plantings: Plans and Specifications." In The Dynamic Landscape, 354–73. Taylor & Francis, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203402870-14.

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Conference papers on the topic "Naturalistic landscapes"

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Bosch Reig, Ignacio, Luis Bosch Roig, Valeria Marcenac, and Nuria Salvador Luján. "Linear parks understood as vertebration instruments of the city." In 24th ISUF 2017 - City and Territory in the Globalization Age. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/isuf2017.2017.6136.

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This research raises as thesis the idea that Linear Park is an urban instrument capable of vertebrate the city and, consequently, of regenerate it. To this end, ten parks strategically located in big cities such as Rio de Janeiro, London, Paris, Madrid, Barcelona, ​​or in medium or small cities such as Valencia, Castellón or Figueres, have been analyzed. Of this analysis we have deduced some characteristics that are considered key in the linear and transversal vertebration of the city, such as: - Green axis-corridor approach - Sequence of events with integration of public buildings - Continuity derived from the union of different areas - Promotion of active leisure activities, individual or collective: sports, cultural, .... - Capability of relation and regeneration of ecosystems: forest, meadow, orchard, nurseries, water, city, .... - Capability to restore environment, with reduction in CO2, in noise pollution, ... - Establish relations between the city and the territory with definition of natural parks - Contribute to prevent thermal inversion in the city - Establish a beginning and an end as recognizable elements in city. - Confrontation of opposites: static or dynamic; soft (green) or hard (pavement); unitary or fragmentary, cartesian or organic, ... The parks thus understood can be organized in diverse typologies, such us: classic order; in net; upholstery-continuos map; linear order with grooves, tapes or bands; landscaper and naturalist; ... .. The work delves into these themes by recognizing tools of interest such as: harmonic relationship; human scale; non-guided tours; sensory experimentation: spaces, sights, aromas, sounds, colorful, ...; unexpected and random; pragmatic and passionate; order within disorder; activation of spaces without hierarchies or apriorisms; flee from monotony; evocations; ... KEY WORDS: linear park, green corridor, city vertebrador, urban regeneration, sensorial experimentation, harmonious relationship, ... REFERENCES: Referred to the following urban parks: Paseo de Copacabana, 1979 Burle Max; La Vilette project 1975, León Krier; La Vilette 1981-87, Bernard Tschumi; Turia Park, 1981, Ricardo Bofill; Botanic Garden, Barcelona, ​​2002, Carlos Ferrater; Thames Barrier Park, London, 2000, Signes Group; Garden of the senses, Castellón, Del Rey-Magro; Park of the Manzanares, Madrid, Burgos-Garrido; Les Aigües Park, Figueres, Oliac-Batle; Parque Cabecera, Valencia, De Miguel-Corell-Muñoz
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