fbpx Nature is back in town! | Ecsite

Nature is back in town!

Find this session's presentations here.

This workshop is organised by the Ecsite Nature Group, a thematic group that brings together professionals and institutions who engage audiences with nature. The workshop is open to all, join!

Urban nature is about the city as a habitat - for humans, animals and plants. The majority of Europe's population now lives in cities, and this is where many get their great nature experiences. Cities have a huge potential for species that would otherwise have a hard time.

Museums and science centres can in many ways support research and creative expressions focusing on bringing nature back into our consciousness, language and creativity.

Cities and nature is like a book. There are stories about buildings, and urban development, there are stories about life and recreation, stories about bees, butterflies, birds and wildflowers. Urban nature can help us exploit the large potential of nature in the city and expand the creative sector's horizon.

A detailed programme is here.

Facilitator

Former Deputy Director
Aarhus
Denmark
Science, Collection, Exhibition
Senior Scientist, Collection and Exhibition manager
Naturama
Svendborg
Denmark
Head of Communication / Director of the Hall of Biodiversity - Ciência Viva Center
Porto
Portugal
Carole Paleco
International relations and projects
Brussels
Belgium

Session speakers

filipa guilherme
Research Assistant
University of Porto
Biodiversity in densely urbanised cities: the case of Porto, Portugal. Porto is a medium-sized city (42 km2) in the heart of a lively metropolitan area of nearly 2 million inhabitants. It has a privileged location in the coastal area of northern Portugal where River Douro meets the ocean with environmental conditions influenced by Mediterranean and Atlantic climates. Presently, the area is heavily urbanised up to its administrative boundaries, creating an urban continuum with the adjoining municipalities. Despite the marked fragmentation and low habitat connectivity, the green structure of Porto harbours an extraordinary diversity of fauna, especially in the peripheral patches. These patches are occupied by agriculture and forest, including the public parks and gardens that act as refuge areas for biodiversity in the urbanised matrix.
paulo farinha marques
Landscabe arkitekt
University of Porto
Landscape architecture: designing the new landscapes of biodiversity. Planned and designed spaces for multipurpose use enable humans to be connected with the diversity of the living world. Such links are fundamental for health and well-being of the human society by creating opportunities for a fairer and sustainable future. Experiencing a diverse landscape stimulates creativity and quality of life. Landscape design can provide the skills to produce organised and rich species diversity to accommodate a variety of public interests.
Associate Professor Environmental Philosophy
Radboud University, Nijmegen - Institute for Science, Innovation and Society
Nijmegen
Netherlands
The ethics of rewilding and ecological restoration. Rewilding is becoming more popular, but is also often highly contested. Whereas traditionally, ecological restoration is seen as the attempt to restore disturbed ecosystems to a former, pre-disturbance state, in contrast, rewilding is oriented towards the future. In places with a long human history no clear predisturbance condition exists that one could seek to restore, here rewilding opens up the possibility of reintroducing ‘wildness’ and allow for the existence of ‘self-willed land’. Rewilding is part of a broader cultural trend to defend the value of wildness against an overly humanised world. Because of this radical egocentric stance, rewilding easily gives rise to conflicts when it takes place in cultural heritage landscapes: conflicts between different views on landscapes, but also on the significance of history for human identity, and on the place of humans within the natural world.
Policy Officer DG Research and Innovation
European Commission
Brussels
Belgium
Let Nature Be the Solution: EU Research & Innovation and Public Engagement for Renaturing Cities. What opportunities there might be to establish new EU-projects dealing with urban nature and biodiversity in cities within a communication context? Sustainable management of natural resources and greener cities approaches and initiatives
Humberto Delgado Rosa
Director for Natural Capital
DG Environment, European Commission
“The EU action plan for nature, people and the economy: prospects and opportunities for urban biodiversity"