Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Capturing residents’ perceptions of green space...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Capturing residents’ perceptions of green spaces in densifying urban landscapes - The potentials of mental mapping

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Capturing residents’ perceptions of green spaces in densifying urban landscapes - The potentials of mental mapping. / Otto, Jacqueline; Borgström, Sara; Haase, Dagmar et al.
In: Urban Forestry and Urban Greening, Vol. 94, 128266, 30.04.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Otto J, Borgström S, Haase D, Andersson E. Capturing residents’ perceptions of green spaces in densifying urban landscapes - The potentials of mental mapping. Urban Forestry and Urban Greening. 2024 Apr 30;94:128266. Epub 2024 Mar 7. doi: 10.1016/j.ufug.2024.128266

Author

Otto, Jacqueline ; Borgström, Sara ; Haase, Dagmar et al. / Capturing residents’ perceptions of green spaces in densifying urban landscapes - The potentials of mental mapping. In: Urban Forestry and Urban Greening. 2024 ; Vol. 94.

Bibtex

@article{6696f3d1436749869a9da1f94aa3e6ba,
title = "Capturing residents{\textquoteright} perceptions of green spaces in densifying urban landscapes - The potentials of mental mapping",
abstract = "Understanding residents{\textquoteright} perceptions of green-blue infrastructure (GBI) is critical to ensure continued access to its associated benefits in growing and densifying urban landscapes. Physical availability and accessibility of green spaces alone do not directly translate to actual appreciation and use. Residents{\textquoteright} sense of place can determine if benefits from GBI are realized and how landscape changes may be perceived. In this study, set in sub-urban Stockholm, Sweden, we applied a mixed-methods approach combining mental mapping with follow-up interviews to investigate how such methodology can improve our understanding of residents{\textquoteright} perception of the recreational use of GBI. For the mental mapping exercise, participants drew, freehand, a map of appreciated neighborhood places for recreational purposes. Our results clearly show that mental mapping provides relevant information on individual and collective perceptions of recreational GBI, linkages between green-blue and gray infrastructure elements, and recreational hot-spots of importance to the local inhabitants. The unguided approach to welding local knowledge with spatial expressions makes the method well suited to contribute to a better understanding of plural senses of place with regards to the recreational use of GBI in rapidly urbanizing landscapes and an enhanced capacity to recognise locally appreciated recreational spaces in planning and practical management.",
keywords = "Cognitive Map, Green-Blue Infrastructure, Recreation, Sense of Place, Urban Densification",
author = "Jacqueline Otto and Sara Borgstr{\"o}m and Dagmar Haase and Erik Andersson",
year = "2024",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1016/j.ufug.2024.128266",
language = "English",
volume = "94",
journal = "Urban Forestry and Urban Greening",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Capturing residents’ perceptions of green spaces in densifying urban landscapes - The potentials of mental mapping

AU - Otto, Jacqueline

AU - Borgström, Sara

AU - Haase, Dagmar

AU - Andersson, Erik

PY - 2024/4/30

Y1 - 2024/4/30

N2 - Understanding residents’ perceptions of green-blue infrastructure (GBI) is critical to ensure continued access to its associated benefits in growing and densifying urban landscapes. Physical availability and accessibility of green spaces alone do not directly translate to actual appreciation and use. Residents’ sense of place can determine if benefits from GBI are realized and how landscape changes may be perceived. In this study, set in sub-urban Stockholm, Sweden, we applied a mixed-methods approach combining mental mapping with follow-up interviews to investigate how such methodology can improve our understanding of residents’ perception of the recreational use of GBI. For the mental mapping exercise, participants drew, freehand, a map of appreciated neighborhood places for recreational purposes. Our results clearly show that mental mapping provides relevant information on individual and collective perceptions of recreational GBI, linkages between green-blue and gray infrastructure elements, and recreational hot-spots of importance to the local inhabitants. The unguided approach to welding local knowledge with spatial expressions makes the method well suited to contribute to a better understanding of plural senses of place with regards to the recreational use of GBI in rapidly urbanizing landscapes and an enhanced capacity to recognise locally appreciated recreational spaces in planning and practical management.

AB - Understanding residents’ perceptions of green-blue infrastructure (GBI) is critical to ensure continued access to its associated benefits in growing and densifying urban landscapes. Physical availability and accessibility of green spaces alone do not directly translate to actual appreciation and use. Residents’ sense of place can determine if benefits from GBI are realized and how landscape changes may be perceived. In this study, set in sub-urban Stockholm, Sweden, we applied a mixed-methods approach combining mental mapping with follow-up interviews to investigate how such methodology can improve our understanding of residents’ perception of the recreational use of GBI. For the mental mapping exercise, participants drew, freehand, a map of appreciated neighborhood places for recreational purposes. Our results clearly show that mental mapping provides relevant information on individual and collective perceptions of recreational GBI, linkages between green-blue and gray infrastructure elements, and recreational hot-spots of importance to the local inhabitants. The unguided approach to welding local knowledge with spatial expressions makes the method well suited to contribute to a better understanding of plural senses of place with regards to the recreational use of GBI in rapidly urbanizing landscapes and an enhanced capacity to recognise locally appreciated recreational spaces in planning and practical management.

KW - Cognitive Map

KW - Green-Blue Infrastructure

KW - Recreation

KW - Sense of Place

KW - Urban Densification

U2 - 10.1016/j.ufug.2024.128266

DO - 10.1016/j.ufug.2024.128266

M3 - Journal article

VL - 94

JO - Urban Forestry and Urban Greening

JF - Urban Forestry and Urban Greening

M1 - 128266

ER -