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1.Climate as a Public Interest in Planning and Zoning
2.Characteristics and Forms of the Urban Climate
3.Energy-Conscious Planning and Zoning
4.Methods of Information Acquisition for Planning (Measurements, Wind Tunnels, Numerical Modelling)
5.Climatic and Air Hygiene Maps as Aids for Planning and Zoning (Example: Climate Atlas Federation Region Stuttgart)
6.Recommendations for Planning
6.1Preservation and Acquisition of Green Space
6.1.1Landscape and Open-Space Control Plan
6.1.2Benchmarks for Describing "Green" Uses
6.1.3Avoidance of Soil Capping by Green Spaces and Water
6.1.4Roof Greening
6.1.5Façade Greening
6.2Securing the Local Air Exchange
6.2.1Cold Air Production
6.2.2Fresh Air Supply
6.2.3Green Corridors
6.2.4Advantageous Forms of Development
6.3Measures for Air Pollution Control
6.3.1Industrial and Commercial Areas
6.3.2Home Heating
6.3.3Traffic
6.4Planning-Related Urban Climate Studies
7.Bibliography
8.Thematic Websites
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RECOMMENDATIONS FOR PLANNING
   
 6.2.3 Green Corridors

In addition to the importance of green spaces for reserving fresh air corridors, their function as dividing elements in the developed landscape must be given special consideration. The effectiveness and expansiveness of green spaces go hand in hand. Sufficient proportions of green space have a climate-regulating function. In general, the provision of meadows with a thin cover of trees and shrubs is especially favorable.

Green belts are particularly suited for the separation of residential areas from emitting industrial and commercial areas as well as heavily-trafficked roads. They function as spacers, aid air exchange, and dilute air pollution (cf. Chapter 6.3.3). In addition, similar to a filter they hold back powdery pollutants. Green breaks do not only represent a dividing element of urban design, they also signify interruptions in the heat islands characteristic to built-up areas, which supports small-scale air exchange processes between the city sections they divide and between areas with differing temperatures.

Legal Bases

From an urban climate perspective, the realization of a sensible arrangement of built and unbuilt (green) spaces requires a coordinated interlinking of landscape plans / land-use plans and open-space control plans / site plans (cf. Chapter 6.1.1). Climatic and air-hygiene maps represent – as described in Chapter 5 – an indispensable technical basis in this regard.










 
 
 
Fig. 6/19: Aeration potential of the city center of Freiburg in the annual average (RÖCKLE & RICHTER, 2003)