Urban Green Space: Comparing the EU and Ukrainian Practice

The goal of the paper is to compare the urban green space practice in the EU and Ukraine to find the advantages and drawbacks of both approaches. In order to reach the goal, following tasks has been raised: (1) to reveal the most common patterns of green space allocation in European cities; (2) to c...

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Main Authors: Lishchynskyy Ihor, Lyzun Mariia, Siskos Evangelos, Savelyev Yevhen, Kuryliak Vitalina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2021-01-01
Series:SHS Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.shs-conferences.org/articles/shsconf/pdf/2021/11/shsconf_iscsai2021_05007.pdf
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spelling doaj-77501c87f0ee45968135be293b805ec82021-04-06T13:52:52ZengEDP SciencesSHS Web of Conferences2261-24242021-01-011000500710.1051/shsconf/202110005007shsconf_iscsai2021_05007Urban Green Space: Comparing the EU and Ukrainian PracticeLishchynskyy Ihor0Lyzun Mariia1Siskos Evangelos2Savelyev Yevhen3Kuryliak Vitalina4West Ukrainian National UniversityWest Ukrainian National UniversityUniversity of Western MacedoniaWest Ukrainian National UniversityWest Ukrainian National UniversityThe goal of the paper is to compare the urban green space practice in the EU and Ukraine to find the advantages and drawbacks of both approaches. In order to reach the goal, following tasks has been raised: (1) to reveal the most common patterns of green space allocation in European cities; (2) to consider the urban green landscape in Ukrainian first-tier and second-tier cities; (3) to compare the trends and challenges of urban green space allocation in the EU and Ukraine. In Europe, a typical pattern of green space is a combination of greenbelts, regional green areas, green wedges, green middles, green infrastructure, etc. The main significant feature and advantage of green areas in European cities is the connectivity of the larger objects (parks and woods) and smaller ones (squares, boulevards, inter-quarter plantings, etc.). Urban territories in Ukraine involves quite large green areas (mostly by combining "communal parks" and "green infrastructure"). Transformation crisis leads to the vast decline of industrial zones, which were spontaneously transformed into de-facto green or brown spaces. After economic recovery green space is shrinking dramatically under the pressure of commercial and residential zones. For Ukraine, the challenge is the creation of small urban landscaping facilities and increasing functional content and quality of the existing green spaces.https://www.shs-conferences.org/articles/shsconf/pdf/2021/11/shsconf_iscsai2021_05007.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lishchynskyy Ihor
Lyzun Mariia
Siskos Evangelos
Savelyev Yevhen
Kuryliak Vitalina
spellingShingle Lishchynskyy Ihor
Lyzun Mariia
Siskos Evangelos
Savelyev Yevhen
Kuryliak Vitalina
Urban Green Space: Comparing the EU and Ukrainian Practice
SHS Web of Conferences
author_facet Lishchynskyy Ihor
Lyzun Mariia
Siskos Evangelos
Savelyev Yevhen
Kuryliak Vitalina
author_sort Lishchynskyy Ihor
title Urban Green Space: Comparing the EU and Ukrainian Practice
title_short Urban Green Space: Comparing the EU and Ukrainian Practice
title_full Urban Green Space: Comparing the EU and Ukrainian Practice
title_fullStr Urban Green Space: Comparing the EU and Ukrainian Practice
title_full_unstemmed Urban Green Space: Comparing the EU and Ukrainian Practice
title_sort urban green space: comparing the eu and ukrainian practice
publisher EDP Sciences
series SHS Web of Conferences
issn 2261-2424
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The goal of the paper is to compare the urban green space practice in the EU and Ukraine to find the advantages and drawbacks of both approaches. In order to reach the goal, following tasks has been raised: (1) to reveal the most common patterns of green space allocation in European cities; (2) to consider the urban green landscape in Ukrainian first-tier and second-tier cities; (3) to compare the trends and challenges of urban green space allocation in the EU and Ukraine. In Europe, a typical pattern of green space is a combination of greenbelts, regional green areas, green wedges, green middles, green infrastructure, etc. The main significant feature and advantage of green areas in European cities is the connectivity of the larger objects (parks and woods) and smaller ones (squares, boulevards, inter-quarter plantings, etc.). Urban territories in Ukraine involves quite large green areas (mostly by combining "communal parks" and "green infrastructure"). Transformation crisis leads to the vast decline of industrial zones, which were spontaneously transformed into de-facto green or brown spaces. After economic recovery green space is shrinking dramatically under the pressure of commercial and residential zones. For Ukraine, the challenge is the creation of small urban landscaping facilities and increasing functional content and quality of the existing green spaces.
url https://www.shs-conferences.org/articles/shsconf/pdf/2021/11/shsconf_iscsai2021_05007.pdf
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