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Monitoring the Sustained Environmental Performances of Nature-Based Solutions in Urban Environments: The Case Study of the UPPER Project (Latina, Italy)

Author

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  • Riccardo Gasbarrone

    (Research and Service Center for Sustainable Technological Innovation (Ce.R.S.I.Te.S.), Sapienza-University of Rome, 04100 Latina, Italy)

  • Giuseppe Bonifazi

    (Department of Chemical Engineering, Materials and Environment, Sapienza-University of Rome, 00184 Rome, Italy)

  • Silvia Serranti

    (Department of Chemical Engineering, Materials and Environment, Sapienza-University of Rome, 00184 Rome, Italy)

Abstract

This follow-up study investigates the long-term environmental sustainability and remediation outcomes of the UPPER (‘Urban Productive Parks for Sustainable Urban Regeneration’-UIA04-252) project in Latina, Italy, focusing on Nature-Based Solutions (NbS) applied to urban green infrastructure. By integrating proximal and satellite-based remote sensing methodologies, the research evaluates persistent improvements in vegetation health, soil moisture dynamics, and overall environmental quality over multiple years. Building upon the initial monitoring framework, this case study incorporates updated data and refined techniques to quantify temporal changes and assess the ecological performance of NbS interventions. In more detail, ground-based data from meteo-climatic, air quality stations and remote satellite data from the Sentinel-2 mission are adopted. Ground-based measurements such as temperature, humidity, radiation, rainfall intensity, PM10 and PM2.5 are carried out to monitor the overall environmental quality. Updated satellite imagery from Sentinel-2 is analyzed using advanced band ratio indices, including the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), the Normalized Difference Water Index (NDWI) and the Normalized Difference Moisture Index (NDMI). Comparative temporal analysis revealed consistent enhancements in vegetation health, with NDVI values significantly exceeding baseline levels (NDVI 2022–2024: +0.096, p = 0.024), demonstrating successful vegetation establishment with larger gains in green areas (+27.0%) than parking retrofits (+11.4%, p = 0.041). However, concurrent NDWI decline (−0.066, p = 0.063) indicates increased vegetation water stress despite irrigation infrastructure. NDMI improvements (+0.098, p = 0.016) suggest physiological adaptation through stomatal regulation. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) of meteo-climatic variables reveals temperature as the dominant environmental driver (PC2 loadings > 0.8), with municipality-wide NDVI-temperature correlations of r = −0.87. These multi-scale findings validate sustained NbS effectiveness in enhancing vegetation density and ecosystem services, yet simultaneously expose critical water-limitation trade-offs in Mediterranean semi-arid contexts, necessitating adaptive irrigation management and continued monitoring for long-term urban climate resilience. The integrated monitoring approach underscores the critical role of continuous, multi-scale assessment in ensuring long-term success and adaptive management of NbS-based interventions.

Suggested Citation

  • Riccardo Gasbarrone & Giuseppe Bonifazi & Silvia Serranti, 2026. "Monitoring the Sustained Environmental Performances of Nature-Based Solutions in Urban Environments: The Case Study of the UPPER Project (Latina, Italy)," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(2), pages 1-33, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:2:p:864-:d:1840670
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