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NBS Catalogue

A Catalogue of Nature-based Solutions for Urban Resilience

More than half of the world's population lives in cities, and that number is rising every day. Urban areas are becoming more crowded, reducing green space and causing loss of biodiversity. Urban environments lose their resilience to mitigate the negative effects of climate change. As a result cities & towns are regularly confronted with devastating floods or heatwaves and droughts that cost millions of dollars in damage and even threaten our livelihoods.

Power of Nature-based Solutions

Nature-based Solutions (NBS) are approaches that use nature and natural processes for delivering infrastructure, services, and integrative solutions to meet the rising challenge of urban resilience. NBS can provide multiple benefits to cities and address different societal challenges, including reducing disaster risk and building climate resilience, while also contributing to restore biodiversity, creating opportunities for recreation, improving human health, water and food security, and supporting community wellbeing and livelihoods.

Suitable NBS can be considered dependent on the characteristics of the city such as the hydrological conditions. Different types of cities based on their location in the river basin.

“A Catalogue of Nature Based Solutions for Urban Resilience”

Despite a growing demand for Nature-Based Solutions (NBS) in cities, many people who make planning, financing, and technical decisions for urban resilience building have little knowledge of when and how to build with nature. Our NBS catalogue provides them with guidance, real-world examples that illustrate how such approaches have worked, and technical assistance to help identify potentially viable nature-based investments that help cities address resilience challenges.

DOWNLOAD THE CATALOGUE

An integral version of the catalogue can be downloaded from the World Bank’s Open Knowledge Repository

Scalable Approach

Nature-based solutions can be applied across spatial scales and settings in and around cities. Examples include small (local) scale green spaces on buildings; bioswales and green corridors along streets and water bodies; urban parks and forests within city boundaries (city-scale), and larger areas with wetlands and forests upstream or along the coast, sheltering cities from flooding and improving availability and quality of water (regional scale).

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Schematic sections of NBS at regional, city and neighborhood scale.

Fourteen Families of NBS

To a degree, the position of a city determines the suitability of NBS types. To help select appropriate NBS the catalogue contains fourteen NBS categories. Urban Forests, Terraces and Slopes, River and Stream Renaturation, Building Solutions, Open Green Spaces, Green Corridors, Urban Farming, Bioretention Areas, Natural Inland Wetlands, Constructed Inland Wetlands, River Floodplains, Mangrove Forests, Salt Marshes, and Sandy Shores. We call these the NBS families.

The fourteen NBS typologies – so called ‘NBS Families’. 

Structure of the Catalogue

Section: Processes of NBS-Family "Urban Forest"

Richly visualized the catalogue describes and assesses each of the NBS approaches based on the following criteria:

  1. Processes- relevant for the resilience, functions and benefits of NBS, including infiltration, cooling and carbon sequestration.
  2. Functions - volumetric/quantitative capacity to regulate the effects of potential natural hazards.
  3. Benefits - capacity of NBS to deliver social, economic, and environmental benefits, such as reduction of flood, heat stress risk, human health improvement, job creation and biodiversity enhancement.
  4. Suitability - environmental, technical and urban requirements for implementation as well as information on maintenance and costs.
  5. NBS practice - key examples (worldwide) with relevant lessons learned on social, financial aspects and considerations of governance.

Diagrams: Functions and Benefits (for people) of NBS-Family "Urban Forest"

Collaboration
A Catalogue of Nature-Based Solutions for Urban Resilience” was made for the World Bank Group and Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery (GFDRR). The Catalogue was developed together with the World Bank team in collaboration with Nelen & Schuurmans, UNStudio, Rebel and UNSense.

The Catalogue of Nature-based Solutions for Urban Resilience has been developed as a guidance document to support the growing demand for NBS by enabling an initial identification of potential investments in nature-based solutions. The Catalogue intends to support policy makers, project developers, development professionals, urban planners and engineers with the identification of potential NBS investments, and to start a policy dialogue on NBS in cities. The structure of the NBS catalogue and focus on application and practice of NBS families underlines the importance of moving NBS from the theoretical discussions towards actual (and global) implementation.

Axo:  Three techniques for NBS-Family "Urban Forest": Phytoremediation forest, Ecological forest corridors & Agroforestry

年份

2020 - 2021

类型

研究, 基础设施, 景观

客户

World Bank Group
GFDRR - Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery 

出版物

A Catalogue of NBS for Urban Resilience - World Bank
Biind
Architecten Web
Openbareruimte.nu 
Rooilijn

团队&合作伙伴

Michiel Van Driessche
Eduardo Marin Salinas
Nadya Nilina
Cherk Ga Leung
Zofia Krzykawska
Elan Redekop van der Meulen
World Bank
Nelen & Schuurmans
UNStudio
Rebel
UNSense

List
  1. 别墅花园
  2. 阿姆斯特丹Somerlust公园
  3. 坎普尔公共空间策略
  4. 斯希街区 斯希丹
  5. Vaskhnil,新西伯利亚
  6. 坎特伯雷大教堂区
  7. 'Yaanila Country' 乡村公园
  8. 城市实验农场
  9. Zinder 文化聚落
  10. Ódinstorg 广场
  11. 达拉维 孟买
  12. 秋明城市广场
  13. 新西伯利亚滨水区
  14. Proto Tamansari, 日惹
  15. 再发展策略 Vogabyggð
  16. 阿尔梅勒海事校园
  17. 泰尔-阿珀尔庇护所中心
  18. Smáralind 购物中心总体规划
  19. Ludlstrasse 慕尼黑
  20. Berat 弹性滨河景观
  21. Ásbrú企业园
  22. 20世纪博物馆
  23. Overloon War Museum
  24. 克罗南堡 商业园
  25. 柏林市民公园
  26. Bandar Lampung 公园
  27. 秋明城市花园
  28. 以生物多样性为基础的奶牛养殖产业
  29. 大都会公园Westerpark阿姆斯特丹
  30. 阿尔卑斯山公共空间
  31. 爱尔巴桑策略规划
  32. Fier 规划策略
  33. Shkodra 城市策略
  34. 居菲内斯空间转换策略
  35. 宝安G107城市走廊
  36. 加尔扎拜尔
  37. 叶卡捷琳堡城市乐园
  38. 车里雅宾斯克城市转型策略
  39. 鲁汶渔市
  40. 码头印象
  41. 乔纳斯,阿姆斯特丹
  42. S4 高速路, 杭州
  43. 埃德和瓦赫宁根的“知识轴线”
  44. 绿色城市策略
  45. 越秀353转型
  46. 二龙山休闲公园
  47. 勒沃库森的铁路机车大厅
  48. 丹霞休闲公园
  49. Cartesius 街区
  50. Lelystad校园
  51. S-West 爱因霍芬
  52. 奉贤研发园区
  53. 达姆施塔特城市规划2030+
  54. 海德堡创意居住街区
  55. Isle of Dikes
  56. 莱茵弗利特社区的城市食物森林
  57. Sijthoff
  58. 迪腾巴赫区
  59. 布吉河
  60. 未来的“社科之城”
  61. Almazov National Medical Research Centre
  62. Smakkelaarsveld Utrecht
  63. 赫尔蒙德智能社区Brainport
  64. Eemsdelta Campus
  65. The Unbound Amsterdam
  66. Healthy Tracks
  67. Master Plan Ter Aar, Nieuwkoop
  68. Floating Gardens, Amsterdam
  69. A green entrance for the airport
  70. City life in the woods
  71. The Swan, Zwolle (NL)
  72. 'Typhoon-proof' Shenzhen's East Coast
  73. Towards a healthy city by foot
  74. Hondsrug Park Amsterdam
  75. Yangmeikeng Sea Boulevard
  76. Circular City Bodø 2.0
  77. Railroad Zone Amsterdam
  78. Spatial Framework Blankenburg Süden, Berlin
  79. Design Guide Public Space, Groningen
  80. Seaside Gardens, Gufunes
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