Evaluating and Prioritizing Duke’s Natural Landscapes
Abstract
Duke University prides itself as being a “university in a forest”. But, Duke must
also continue to advance its academic mission, provide space for the world-renowned
hospital system, and a myr-iad of other things. In order to inform built environment
planning and natural resource manage-ment decisions, our work provides a framework
with which to evaluate natural spaces on Duke’s campus and offers a relative value
(high, medium, low) of these spaces based on five key crite-ria: ecological, programmatic,
cultural, pedagogical, and aesthetic values. The study was carried out at the request
of, and with feedback from, the University’s Campus Sustainability Committee and its
Natural Resources Subcommittee. We then tested the validity of the framework on a
test site on campus. We believe the framework can be used to further the conversation
about Duke’s natural areas, and that it will be a useful tool in campus development
decisions.
Type
Master's projectPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/9657Citation
Li, Siying; & Upshaw, Marshall (2015). Evaluating and Prioritizing Duke’s Natural Landscapes. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/9657.Collections
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