City | Forest: Reordering Plant-Human Relationships Towards Healthy Cities

Item

Title
City | Forest: Reordering Plant-Human Relationships Towards Healthy Cities
Description
Based in the belief that the quality of the urban landscape directly reflects the quality of its soil, I propose to utilize processes of beneficial disturbance to reorder the vegetative and soil regimes in the city’s public realm.

The outcome is a regenerative living infrastructure identified as the City Forest; a collection of trees, associated undergrowth, and soil where people live, work, and play. This typology offers an alternative to the isolated street trees that make up most of America’s urban vegetation and curates an intensive dialogue between people and forest, or city and forest, not possible under current spatial practices.

In this case study, the City Forest redefines major corridors in Cambridge, MA as an efficacious place to begin intensifying the forest. Cambridge is a leader in urban forestry but has yet to boldly confront the socioeconomic practices inhibiting a healthy future. By rejecting the hierarchies and land use patterns inherent to our car-centric landscapes, the City Forest emphasizes solidarity with nonhuman nature and advocates against destructive forms of economic practice and ontological distinction, asserting that the natural capital that accumulates in the forest reciprocates directly with a healthy lived experience in the city.
Creator
Villa, Gracie
Subject
City
Forest
Lived experience
Natural capital
Reciprocity
Urban forestry
Landscape architecture
Urban forestry
Contributor
Hilderbrand, Gary R
Date
2021-05-21T07:15:32Z
2021
2021-05-18
2021-05
2021-05-21T07:15:32Z
Type
Thesis or Dissertation
text
Format
application/pdf
application/pdf
Identifier
Villa, Gracie. 2021. City | Forest: Reordering Plant-Human Relationships Towards Healthy Cities. Master's thesis, Harvard Graduate School of Design.
28493055
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37367592
Language
en