Ecological and economic impacts of green roofs and permeable pavements at the city level: the case of Corvallis,Oregon |
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Authors: | Long Zhou Thomas Woodfin Tian Chen Kun Song |
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Affiliation: | 1. Division of Landscape Architecture, College of Architecture, The University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, USA;2. School of Architecture, Tianjin University, Tianjin, P. R. China |
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Abstract: | A city's spatial footprint is covered by extensive impervious building roofs and paved surfaces, which contribute to greater storm-water runoff, more surface pollutants, and less carbon sequestration, hence, worse ecosystem services. This research conducts an empirical study on the ecological and economic impacts of a citywide adoption of green roofs and permeable pavements in Corvallis, OR. The effects on ecosystem services of using green roofs and pervious pavements for a low impact development are modelled using Integrated Value of Ecosystem Services Trade-offs and compared to those from the City's current conventional development without green roofs and pervious pavements. The differences are analysed for ecological impact by storm-water yield, storm-water purification, and carbon sequestration and economic impact by a cost-benefit comparison. The results indicate that low impact development, especially intensive green roofs on commercial/industrial buildings and permeable pavements for parking lots, plays a significant role, even with a higher initial implementation cost, for long-term urban sustainability. |
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Keywords: | green roofs permeable pavements ecosystem services ecological and economic impacts |
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