Planning for Street Trees and Human–Nature Relations : Lessons from 600 Years of Street Tree Planting in Paris
Laurian, Lucie
Planning for Street Trees and Human–Nature Relations : Lessons from 600 Years of Street Tree Planting in Paris - Sage 2019 - Vol 55, Issue 4, 2019 : (282-310 p.)
Planting rectilinear regularly spaced and low-diversity rows of trees along sidewalks is the dominant streetscaping practice in Western cities. Street trees provide shade, pleasant pedestrian environments, and ecological benefits. I interrogate the origin of this surprisingly stable practice by exploring the last 600 years of street tree planting in Paris. Paris’ iconic tree-lined boulevards have influenced streetscapes worldwide. This model of royal and imperial origins stems from, and reproduces, a complex mode of human–nature relations involving biophilia, the use of orderly nature as a symbolic commodity and, more recently, ecological stewardship.
street trees
history
arboriculture
ecology
human–nature relations
urban forestry
Paris
Planning for Street Trees and Human–Nature Relations : Lessons from 600 Years of Street Tree Planting in Paris - Sage 2019 - Vol 55, Issue 4, 2019 : (282-310 p.)
Planting rectilinear regularly spaced and low-diversity rows of trees along sidewalks is the dominant streetscaping practice in Western cities. Street trees provide shade, pleasant pedestrian environments, and ecological benefits. I interrogate the origin of this surprisingly stable practice by exploring the last 600 years of street tree planting in Paris. Paris’ iconic tree-lined boulevards have influenced streetscapes worldwide. This model of royal and imperial origins stems from, and reproduces, a complex mode of human–nature relations involving biophilia, the use of orderly nature as a symbolic commodity and, more recently, ecological stewardship.
street trees
history
arboriculture
ecology
human–nature relations
urban forestry
Paris