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Implementation of Green Infrastructure in Existing Urban Structures: Tracking Changes in Ferencváros, Budapest

Author

Listed:
  • Gabriel Silva Dantas

    (Department of Urban Planning and Urban Green Infrastructure, Institute of Landscape Architecture Urban Planning and Garden Art, Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences, 1118 Budapest, Hungary)

  • Ildikó Réka Báthoryné Nagy

    (Department of Urban Planning and Urban Green Infrastructure, Institute of Landscape Architecture Urban Planning and Garden Art, Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences, 1118 Budapest, Hungary)

  • Pedro Brizack Nogueira

    (Department of Exact Sciences, State University of Feira de Santana, Feira de Santana 44036-900, Brazil)

Abstract

Understanding the resilience of urban forms as a latent force that drives a place’s physical characterization and social cohesion is essential for defining successful adaptive processes of pre-existing urban fabrics. Budapest’s ninth district (Ferencváros) is an outstanding example of transforming a complex historical urban context, which underwent renovation strategies guided by maintaining and enhancing essential morphological elements. Courtyards have great relevance in conditioning the well-being in areas of high occupational density, especially in terms of accessibility to urban green infrastructure. In the case of Ferencváros, they were reframed to add new layers of use and to improve territorial integration by unifying smaller private courtyard unities into more extensive communal areas, creating a comprehensive urban green network, preserving urban heritage, and increasing green coverage. This study assesses how this recent re-urbanization phenomenon is related to political changes in a post-socialist city. The conjuncture found in Ferencváros is unique, yet it can be applied in other similar contexts. The methodology applied to this study is supervised classification for the quantitative analysis of remote-sensing image data with GIS software assistance—a procedure rarely applied in medium-scale urban analysis. However, it was verified to be precise and effective in tracking morphological changes. The preliminary results indicate a significant intensification in greenery in the urban pattern, especially in the core areas of the blocks: the courtyards. After the intervention, green areas became more predominant, cohesive, and articulated.

Suggested Citation

  • Gabriel Silva Dantas & Ildikó Réka Báthoryné Nagy & Pedro Brizack Nogueira, 2022. "Implementation of Green Infrastructure in Existing Urban Structures: Tracking Changes in Ferencváros, Budapest," Land, MDPI, vol. 11(5), pages 1-11, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jlands:v:11:y:2022:i:5:p:644-:d:803187
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    Cited by:

    1. Jan K. Kazak & Katarzyna Hodor & Magdalena Wilkosz-Mamcarczyk, 2022. "Climate Change and Current Challenges for Landscapes and Cultural Heritage," Land, MDPI, vol. 11(12), pages 1-3, December.

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