Adrienne Grêt-Regamey
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Last Name
Grêt-Regamey
First Name
Adrienne
ORCID
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03823 - Grêt-Regamey, Adrienne / Grêt-Regamey, Adrienne
370 results
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Publications 1 - 10 of 370
- Influence of urban transformation on place attachment and residential satisfactionItem type: Other Conference Itemvon Wirth, Timo; Stauffacher, Michael; Grêt-Regamey, Adrienne (2013)
- Rapport final Raum+ Jura – Vue d’ensemble des réserves en zone à bâtir pour un développement vers l’intérieur. Résultats du recensement 2019Item type: ReportHollenstein, Karin; Sonderegger, Rolf; Nebel, Reto; et al. (2019)
- Does rated visual landscape quality match visual features? An analysis for renewable energy landscapesItem type: Journal Article
Landscape and Urban PlanningSpielhofer, Reto; Hunziker, Marcel; Kienast, Felix; et al. (2021)Finding the “right” sites for developing renewable energy systems (RES) is one of the major challenges in planning strategies for energy transitions. The visibility aspects of such infrastructure are important factors that explain local opposition. Classical visibility and viewshed analyses of RES disregard people’s perceptions and estimations of new infrastructure. To address this void, we demonstrate an approach that combines rated visual landscape qualities with measured visual features. In doing so, we established visual stimuli with systematically controlled visual impact scenarios featuring the use of renewables in different landscape types. The study investigated how ratings of landscape qualities are affected by landscape changes stemming from RES. We also identified measurable visual features that might help to operationalize landscape qualities. Finally, we intended to improve the understand of how rated landscape qualities lead to preferences for different RES visual impact scenarios. Our results showed that rated coherence is strongly influenced by renewable energy infrastructure, whereas complexity ratings are affected mainly by variations in landscape types. These findings let us to conclude that the visual understanding and visual connectedness between energy systems and surrounding landscapes are core drivers of people’s visual preferences for landscapes altered with RES. Considering landscape qualities within impact assessments of RES can augment our grasp of how the visual character of a landscape changes through renewable energy infrastructure. - Integrating Natural Resource Indicators into Procedural Visualisation for Sustainable Urban Green Space DesignItem type: Conference Paper
Peer reviewed proceedings of digital landscape architecture 2010 at Anhalt University of Applied SciencesWissen Hayek, Ulrike; Halatsch, Jan; Kunze, Antje; et al. (2010) - River rehabilitation as an opportunity for ecological landscape designItem type: Journal Article
Sustainable Cities and SocietyGrêt-Regamey, Adrienne; Weibel, Bettina; Vollmer, Derek; et al. (2016) - Integration von Ökosystemleistungen in partizipative Ansätze für eine nachhaltige RaumplanungItem type: Journal Article
Forum der GeoökologieGrêt-Regamey, Adrienne; Weibel, Bettina (2014) - Coupling a settlement growth model with an agro-economic land allocation model for securing ecosystem services provisionItem type: Journal Article
Journal of Environmental Planning and ManagementDrobnik, Thomas; Huber, Robert; Grêt-Regamey, Adrienne (2017) - Transdisciplinary urban collaboration platform based on GeoDesign for securing urban qualityItem type: Conference Paper
GeoDesign, 3D Modeling and Visualization : Proceedings at Anhalt University of Applied Sciences 2012Wissen Hayek, Ulrike; Neuenschwander, Noemi; Halatsch, Jan; et al. (2012) - Short versus long-term urban planning using multi-objective optimizationItem type: Other Conference Item
Proceedings of the Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference Companion on, GECCO '17Schwaab, Jonas; Deb, Kalyanmoy; Goodman, Erik; et al. (2017) - Global Variation in Climate, Human Development, and Population Density Has Implications for Urban Ecosystem ServicesItem type: Journal Article
SustainabilityRichards, Daniel; Masoudi, Mahyar; Oh, Rachel R.Y.; et al. (2019)Humans rely upon ecosystem services to regulate their environment and to provide resources and cultural benefits. As the world’s urban population grows, it becomes increasingly important to find ways of improving the provision of ecosystem services in urban areas. However, the kinds of ecosystem services that are most needed or demanded by urban populations, and the opportunities to provide these, vary widely in cities around the world. Here we explore variation in climate, Human Development Index (HDI), and population density, and discuss their implications for providing and managing urban ecosystem services. Using 221 published studies of urban ecosystem services, we analyse the extent to which existing research adequately covers global variation in climatic and social conditions. Our results reveal an under-representation of studies from tropical cities and from lower HDI countries, with implications for how we conceptualize and quantify urban ecosystem services, and how we transfer benefits across case studies. Future work should be aimed at correcting these deficits and determining the extent to which conclusions about urban ecosystem services are transferable from one city to another.
Publications 1 - 10 of 370