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  3. Current State Assessment and Transition Strategy for Sustainable Green Systems in the Gateway District, Phoenix
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Current State Assessment and Transition Strategy for Sustainable Green Systems in the Gateway District, Phoenix

Full metadata

Date Created
2014-03-31
Contributors
  • Golub, Aaron (Author)
  • Wiek, Arnim (Author)
  • Arizona State University. School of Sustainability (Contributor)
Topical Subject
  • Sustainable urban development -- Arizona -- Phoenix
Resource Type
Text
Extent
65 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Arizona State and Local Government Documents Collection
Table Of Contents

Executive summary -- Correspondence to scope of work -- Chapter 1. Introduction -- 1.1. Green systems challenges in the Gateway District -- 1.2. Profile of the "Reinvent Phoenix" grant -- 1.3. Sustainable green systems research -- 1.4. Objectives of the current state assessment study -- 1.5. Objectives of the transition strategy study -- Chapter 2. Research design and data sources -- 2.1. Design of the current state assessment study and data sources -- 2.2. Design of the transition strategy study -- Chapter 3. Sustainable green systems goals, indicators, and targets -- 3.1. Goal 1. Reduce stormwater loads and harvest water on-site -- 3.2. Goal 2. Reduce potable water consumption -- 3.3. Goal 3. Reduce daytime temperatures -- 3.4. Goal 4. Improve the social and economic benefits of green systems for health, mobility, and biodiversity -- 3.5. Summary -- Chapter 4. Sustainability of the current state of green systems -- 4.1. Goal 1. Current state of reducing stormwater loads and harvesting water on-site -- 4.2. Goal 2. Current state of reducing potable water consumption -- 4.3. Goal 3. Current state of reducing daytime temperatures -- 4.4. Goal 4. Current state of improving the social and economic benefits of green systems for health, mobility, and biodiversity -- 4.5. Summary -- 4.6. Open issues -- Chapter 5. Causal problem maps of green systems -- 5.1. Goal 1. Problem map of reducing stormwater loads and harvesting water on-site -- 5.2. Goal 2. Problem map of reducing potable water consumption -- 5.3. Goal 3. Problem map of reducing daytime temperatures -- 5.4. Goal 4. Problem map of improving quantity and quality of green systems for social and economic benefits -- Chapter 6. Transition strategy towards sustainable green systems -- 6.1. Strategy inputs -- 6.2. Linking sustainable green systems goals to interventions and investment options -- 6.3. Streets intervention -- 6.4. Buildings and sites intervention -- 6.5. Open spaces intervention -- 6.6. Details on implementation tools for green systems -- 6.7. Synthesis. 5-year action plan for sustainable green systems in Gateway -- Chapter 7. Discussion and conclusions -- 7.1. Critical role of steering committee, City Council, city departments, local experts -- 7.2. Testing strategy, interventions, investments -- 7.3. Coordination across strategies -- 7.4. Anticipating the next set of interventions, investments, and implementation tools -- 7.5. Crafting the next 5-year plan -- References

Identifier
Identifier Type
Locally defined identifier
Identifier Value
azdocs: XUPH 50.2:G 1 G 6/2014
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Series
Reinvent Phoenix
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.42422
Preferred Citation

Strategy for Sustainable Green Systems in the Gateway District, Phoenix (Phoenix, Arizona: City of Phoenix, 2014)

Note
PDF file mistakenly includes cover from Sustainability vision for the Gateway Transit District.
Report submitted to the City of Phoenix Planning and Development Department by the ASU-SOS Team for the project grant 'Reinvent Phoenix--Cultivating Equity, Engagement, Economic Development and Design Excellence with Transit-Oriented Development', funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
System Created
  • 2017-04-13 02:55:48
System Modified
  • 2021-10-04 02:43:04
  •     
  • 1 year 3 months ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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