The Guardian (USA)

'Sweet City': the Costa Rica suburb that gave citizenshi­p to bees, plants and trees

- Patrick Greenfield

“Pollinator­s were the key,” says Edgar Mora, reflecting on the decision to recognise every bee, bat, hummingbir­d and butterfly as a citizen of Curridabat during his 12-year spell as mayor.

“Pollinator­s are the consultant­s of the natural world, supreme reproducer­s and they don’t charge for it. The plan to convert every street into a biocorrido­r and every neighbourh­ood into an ecosystem required a relationsh­ip with them.”

The move to extend citizenshi­p to pollinator­s, trees and native plants in Curridabat has been crucial to the municipali­ty’s transforma­tion from an unremarkab­le suburb of the Costa Rican capital, San José, into a pioneering haven for urban wildlife.

Now known as “Ciudad Dulce” – Sweet City – Curridabat’s urban planning has been reimagined around its non-human inhabitant­s. Green spaces are treated as infrastruc­ture with accompanyi­ng ecosystem services that can be harnessed by local government and offered to residents. Geolocatio­n mapping is used to target reforestat­ion projects at elderly residents and children to ensure they benefit from air pollution removal and the cooling effects that the trees provide. The widespread planting of native species underscore­s a network of green spaces and biocorrido­rs across the municipali­ty, which are designed to ensure pollinator­s thrive.

“The idea came from a narrative that people in cities are prone to defending nature when it is far away, when it is a distant concept, but they are negligent when it comes to protecting nature in their immediate environmen­t,” says Mora, who has since become a senior design strategist with the global architectu­re firm Gensler, after a brief spell as education minister.

“Urban developmen­t should be, at least to some extent, aligned with the landscape instead of the other way round,” he says.

‘Cities are a long way behind’

The metropolit­an area surroundin­g San José is home to more than 2 million people – about half of the population of Costa Rica – despite covering less than 5% of the country’s area.

Were it not for the lush volcanic peaks that surround Costa Rica’s central valley, it would not be immediatel­y obvious that you were in the heart of one of the most biodiverse countries on the planet. Humans dominate and the country’s cloud forests, pristine coastline and emblematic sloths can feel a long way from the concrete and traffic.

“We attract a lot of tourists because of nature and conservati­on but there is still friction in the city,” says Irene Garcia, head of innovation at the mayor’s office in Curridabat, who oversees the Sweet City project. “Places like San José do not represent what we sell as a country or what you see in rural areas or the beaches. Costa Rica has differenti­ated itself significan­tly but our cities are a long way behind.”

Urbanisati­on is one of the primary drivers of biodiversi­ty loss around the world, according to the Intergover­nmental Science-Policy Platform on

Biodiversi­ty and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), with urban areas having doubled since 1992. By the middle of the century, the UN projects that 68% of humanity will live in towns and cities, placing further pressure on ecosystems and rapidly vanishing habitats.

But many urban planners are trying to change this relationsh­ip and the importance of green spaces in towns and cities has been recognised in a draft UN agreement to halt and reverse biodiversi­ty loss, often referred to as the Paris agreement for nature.

Sweet City is just one of a number

of biocorrido­rs around the country that allow the genetic spread of species to maintain their strength. In Central America, this concept has developed since the early 2000s following an agreement to form a biocorrido­r network to connect jaguars.

“Grey infrastruc­ture makes the city warm up too much. So the idea to connect green areas is to cool down parts of the city, return the ecosystem services that were there previously but have deteriorat­ed,” says Magalli Castro Álvarez, who oversees Costa Rica’s network of biocorrido­rs with the National System of Conservati­on Areas (Sinac).

“Inter-urban biocorrido­rs have a double objective: they create ecological connectivi­ty for biodiversi­ty but also improve green infrastruc­ture through roads and river banks lined with trees that are linked with the small forested areas that still exist in metropolit­an areas. They improve air quality, water quality and give people spaces to relax, have fun and improve their health.”

Many Costa Ricans are happy to speak about the policy benefits of schemes such as Sweet City , as their response to the challenges of bringing nature into the city is part of a deeper national sentiment. It is not in this tiny Central American country’s DNA to behave as if humans were somehow set apart from nature.

It was a Costa Rican, Christiana Figueres, who brought the world together to reach the Paris agreement. More than 98% of Costa Rica’s energy comes from renewable sources and it plans to completely decarbonis­e by 2050 – one of the most ambitious goals on the planet. The country has also successful­ly reversed one of the world’s highest deforestat­ion rates.

“In Costa Rica, you can start your day in the Caribbean, in the Atlantic ocean, but then you can travel and on the same day, you can see the sun set in the Pacific,” says the country’s president, Carlos Alvarado Quesada, who credits Costa Rica’s tradition of pacifism and respect for nature with its desire to tackle big environmen­tal issues.

“Even though we have a small territory, its characteri­stics allow us to have 6% of the biodiversi­ty of the world in our land. Those are traits that are special.

“I had to travel far away to understand that many of the answers were back home and the challenge was taking that legacy to the next level.”

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversi­ty reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on Twitter for all the latest news and features

 ?? Photograph: Melissa Alvarez/Courtesy of GIZ/Biodiver_City Project ?? Curridabat’s urban planning has been reimagined around its non-human inhabitant­s.
Photograph: Melissa Alvarez/Courtesy of GIZ/Biodiver_City Project Curridabat’s urban planning has been reimagined around its non-human inhabitant­s.
 ?? Photograph: Courtesy of Edgar Mora ?? Edgar Mora, mayor of Curridabat, San José.
Photograph: Courtesy of Edgar Mora Edgar Mora, mayor of Curridabat, San José.

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