Albuquerque Journal

‘Green View Index’ ranks cities based on the number of trees

- BY MARK PRATT

Where are the trees? More important, where aren’t the trees? A lab at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology is helping some of the world’s cities answer both questions in an attempt to make them more pleasant places to live and work.

In an effort to enhance the critical role trees play in urban environmen­ts — providing cooling shade, alleviatin­g air and noise pollution, and easing the effects of climate change — the school’s Senseable City Lab has developed an online platform that maps out the canopy in some major cities to make it easier for urban planners and ordinary citizens to see where more are needed.

The project, called Tree pedia, uses Google Street View to create what the MIT team calls the Green View Index.

Trees block shortwave radiation and increase water evaporatio­n, creating more comfortabl­e microclima­tes and mitigating air pollution, lab director Carlo Ratti said. But they also just make people feel better, Ratti said, channeling Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson’s theory that humans innately seek out connection­s with nature.

“We as humans have a natural willingnes­s and desire to be in green spaces,” he said.

The interactiv­e website gives bird’s-eye views of 15 cities, with trees represente­d by green dots. Users can zoom into a particular neighborho­od or individual street to see ground-level images.

The City of Lights apparently isn’t the city of trees. Of the cities mapped so far, Paris scores lowest with a Green View Index score of 8.8 percent.

North American cities tend to score higher than European cities. Singapore, however, ranks the highest with a 29.3 percent score, slightly ahead of Vancouver, British Columbia.

The other cities mapped so far are Amsterdam; Boston; Frankfurt, Germany; Geneva, Switzerlan­d; London; Los Angeles; New York; Sacramento, California; Seattle; Tel Aviv, Israel; Toronto; and Turin, Italy. More cities are being added. “In the future, the goal of this project is to start a conversati­on so that cities can see how they compare with one another and how they can learn from each other,” Ratti said.

He also hopes ordinary citizens will use the website to check out their own homes, and advocate with officials for more trees in their neighborho­ods.

The project was inspired by the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council on the Future of Cities, which included increasing tree canopy cover on a list of top 10 urban innovation­s.

“We hope that this endeavor will give citizens a greater appreciati­on of their city’s green canopy and appreciate that the green canopy can assist in responding to climate change,” council manager Alice Charles said in a statement.

Ratti hopes to eventually fill gaps in the map using satellite data, but adds that cataloging street trees is the project’s primary goal.

“Streets are important, because that’s where we spend most of our time,” he said.

 ?? MICHAEL PROBST/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Two cyclists pedal through an alley of small trees in Frankfurt, Germany. Frankfurt was one of the cities mapped by the online platform Treepedia.
MICHAEL PROBST/ASSOCIATED PRESS Two cyclists pedal through an alley of small trees in Frankfurt, Germany. Frankfurt was one of the cities mapped by the online platform Treepedia.

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