Forest cities: nature conquers the heart of cities
This article is also available here in Spanish.

Forest cities: nature conquers the heart of cities

My list

Author | Jaime Ramos

Opposing one another in the past, the city and forest concepts are making up. Such are the benefits of integrating nature into the urban space, that some projects are already considering a total merger with the creation of forest cities.

What is a forest city? Concept, meaning and definition

Forest city is the term used to refer to urban proposals that are designed combining urban infrastructures with local vegetation from the ecosystem in which the city is built. It forms part of modern urban trends. The essence of a forest city involves a form of natural symbiotic city or area which, instead of destroying the natural habitat, takes advantage of its virtues.

Forest cities stem from a prior evolution in which smart city planners embraced the idea of increasing the proportion of green areas. The ratio between forest and city can be boosted through the conservation of existing interior, nearby or remote forests, as proposed by the coalition of 84 cities City4Forests; or under the execution of urban planning proposals that return forests to cities, such as green gardens or urban micro-forests.

Advantages of forest cities

forest cities 2

The advantages of forest cities include:

  • Reducing greenhouse gas emissions and improving air quality. Vegetation acts as an agent which, while it may not eliminate air pollution, it does help to alleviate its effects.
  • More green spaces, better quality of life. It has been proven that green spaces have a positive impact on the wellbeing of local residents.
  • Preservation of ecosystems. There are countless associated benefits: preservation of species, soil conservation, reduction of soil erosion, greater soil quality (with the corresponding benefits, its positive impact on water management, etc.
  • Vegetation as an economic asset.

Disadvantages and risks

  • It is not always easy to integrate nature into the city. It requires careful planning, in particular in cities with infrastructures that make it hard to "go back". Apart from that, the preservation of forests requires specific requirements that perhaps cannot be met or are too expensive.
  • An arbitrary application of the concept could affect existing ecosystems, fostering the appearance of invasive species.

Examples of forest cities

Liuzhou Forest City (China), the most famous

40,000 trees and one million plants from more than 100 different species for 30,000 inhabitants. These are the major figures that the firm Stefano Boeri Architetti together with the Chinese authorities in the city of Liuzhou planned for their forest city.

The studio, famous for its declared philosophy on the introduction of nature in cities is taking the integration between buildings and nature to a new level. With its new city, it hopes to release 10,000 tons of CO2 into the atmosphere each year and produce 900 tons of oxygen.

Cancun Smart Forest City

forest cities 3

Covering an even larger area than the one above, Stefano Boeri Architetti has also been involved in the Cancun forest city project. They are working on a new city covering 400 green hectares, which will include 7.5 million plants and reduce the carbon footprint by 116,000 tons.

Urban forests using the Miyawaki method

Apart from these two, there are countless initiatives at a global level that seek to achieve urban reforestation. Many are based on the so-called Akira Miyawaki botanical method. This has enabled the creation of 2,000 new urban forests, accelerating the reforestation process in a respectful and participatory manner.

Images | Freepik/mrsiraphol y Stefano Boeri Architetti

Related content

Recommended profiles for you

LH
Luis Hernandez
Arquitectonia Restauracion
Owner Director
JS
Juan Carlos Sánchez-Tappan
SOFAR
DH
Dohui Hong
Daegu metropolitan city
Secondee at UCLG ASPAC
DC
deteriel chicana
liderazgo
CV
Ciprian Vladislav
ADR Nord Est
Expert - Regional Information Office of North-East Regional Development Agency
CH
Christian Hansen
schaefer | hansen
Partner / CEO
PR
Peter Runacres
Earls Court Development Company
LM
Lidsy Mathenge
University of Nairobi
KS
Katherine Suyo
UTEC
Student
CC
Carmen Cadenas
Gobierno de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires
CS
Csaba Sandor
SURVIOT Monitoring Ltd.
CEO
AF
Amin Farjah
KTH (EIT InnoEnergy)
First year student of the Master in Energy for Smart Cities at KTH.
NC
Néstor Correa
Independent
JC
JAVIER CALONGE
ELEKTRA SA
EE MANAGER
KV
Konstantinos Vrouchos
Stirixis Techniki SA
Senior VP, Business Development
DT
David Thein
Sweco
JH
javier hernandez
EMCALI-RETIE-RESOC-DISRAEL
PC
Paul Copping
Fawley Waterside Ltd
Chief Technology Officer
HP
Howard PAKOSH
Piera Systems
Director, Sales & Business Development
MC
Monique Calisti
Martel Innovate
CEO

Are we building the cities we really need?

Explore Cartography of Our Urban Future —a bold rethink of ‘smart’ cities and what we must change by 2030.