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Monday, August 06, 2012

Street Trees & The Importance Of Codes

Though tempted, I won’t write a soliloquy today on the many virtues of street trees. Others have done so better than I, including Allan Jacobs, who wrote in the book Great Streets, “Given a limited budget, the most effective expenditure of funds to improve a street would probably be on trees.”

Some of my colleagues have written about the inherent economic value of trees, parsing all manner of numbers and outcomes. Those are interesting intellectually, but they are also frankly numbers that can be gamed depending on the person running them. For me it’s more practical. Trees provide shade. They make a street more beautiful. Both of those things encourage me to be outside more, to walk more, to ride a bike more. It’s really quite that simple.

Here are two blogs this week on the subject: “SidTV:Trees Alive” “What Trees Mean to Communities

If there were only two things I’d like you to remember from this piece it’s that:

Street Trees are really important to walkability

What Gets Coded, Gets Built

The details matter when it comes to creating desirable places. Savannah can arguably afford more mistakes than other places, simply because of the abundance of quality streets and public spaces it possesses. It will still attract people to visit, live and work because of its physical qualities. But as the city continues to experience rejuvenation, it must take great care to keep enhancing its great assets. And clearly its primary asset is the beautiful, walkable quality of its neighborhoods.

Allow me an analogy: A restaurant may have a loyal base of existing customers, but if it doesn’t take care of new people who come in the door, it will eventually experience stagnation and decline. It’s wise to continue looking for ways to generate new revenue, and not just rely on the “regulars”. Cities are no different. In the case of Savannah in particular, it must continue to enhance the quality of its streets and neighborhoods in places beyond the Historic District, or it will miss a valuable window of opportunity to expand its revenue (happy citizens).

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3 comments:

  1. I always think how much more inviting all of Salisbury would be with more trees, more shade, cleaner air, nicer visual appeal.

    ReplyDelete
  2. San Diego tree stats from the 2nd link:

    Yearly Eco Impact
    Selected trees in the region
    Total Benefits
    $6,229,503 saved
    Greenhouse Gas Benefits
    24,442,996 lbs CO2 reduced
    $488,859 saved
    Water Benefits
    107,465,158 gallons conserved
    $196,661 saved
    Energy Benefits
    10,953,152 kWh conserved
    $1,783,282 saved
    Air Quality Benefits
    60,797 lbs pollutants reduced
    $3,760,699 saved

    ReplyDelete
  3. Love trees, "I think I shall never see a poem as lovely as a tree..." However figure the cost of maintenace. Don't plant trees under telephone, electric lines. Too costly.

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