The Scotsman

Placing a proper value on ‘priceless’ nature is vital

- Neil Bancroft

The Astley Ainslie Community Trust (AACT) will be going out to public consultati­on with its plans for this historic site in Edinburgh in the new year.

Since the money to develop the site was gifted to the city by David Ainslie more than a century ago, this hospital in The Grange and its landscape have been associated with an understand­ing that there is healing to be found in green spaces and access to nature.

As consultant­s to the Community Trust, Harrisonst­evens has surveyed the woodlands, and open spaces that surround the buildings on this 42-acre site as part of a process that puts a value on this parkland and its benefits to people, wildlife and the environmen­t. To many people, placing a monetary value on trees and grass seems wrong. Surely nature and its gifts are priceless? And yes they are, but that has not saved them in the past from being polluted or bespoiled, so if we can find a way to put a value on them that encompasse­s all their benefits, from lifting the spirits and soaking up flood waters, to stripping the air of pollution, then it makes a more powerful case for protecting them.

This effort of putting a value on natural capital is taking place more often. There’s a recognitio­n that there’s a cost, to us and to the environmen­t that has to be paid if natural features are simply stripped away.

This wasn’t always the case. Large infrastruc­ture projects would run roughshod over concerns about wildlife and green space. But now formulatio­ns have been worked out that can estimate the value of a street tree at all stages of growth, from sapling to mature specimen, taking into account the water that it holds back from rushing into street drains during downpours to the cooling effect of its leaves and branches.

The trees at Astley Ainslie Hospital include some of the rarest specimens in Scotland outside of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinof

burgh. In this particular part of southern Edinburgh, where there are not many areas of open green space for people to enjoy, these trees and their surroundin­gs are of great value to the local community.

Places like this, once lost, cannot easily be recreated which is why being able to assess benefits is so important and earlier this year the Dasgupta Review set out the economics

biodiversi­ty, arguing that nature, “our most precious asset”, could no longer be ignored by economic decision makers.

As landscape architects, Harrisonst­evens believes that putting a price on nature is a vital step along the road to saving it. We work with a number of consultant­s to provide an accurate account of the ecosystem services and value of the biodiversi­ty that exists on a site. We then look to increase this value with landscape interventi­ons such as daylightin­g rivers, planting trees, and maintenanc­e regimes to increase the carbon capture of a site.

With Astley Ainslie we worked with the NHS and city council to understand how they value the site and what the future could look like with the new City Place Plan or “quiet routes”. We now look forward to hearing the feedback from the stakeholde­rs and public in the consultati­on process and support temporary changes that can benefit both the current function of the hospital and future community uses. These could include Forest Schools, vegetable growing and woodland management practices increasing the value of nature on the site.

Neil Bancroft is Associate at Harrisonst­evens

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The Astley Ainslie Hospital site
0 The Astley Ainslie Hospital site

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