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Green Infrastructure

GI 201: Implementing Green Infrastructure at Multiple Scales (Pilot Course)

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Date:

July 16-19, 2012

Location:

National Conservation Training Center (NCTC) in Shepherdstown, WV

Course Description:

This pilot course offering provides participants with applications and techniques for the implementation of Green Infrastructure at multiple scales. Building off of The Conservation Fund’s Strategic Conservation Planning Using a Green Infrastructure Approach Course, this offering will examine the next steps for on-the-ground implementation of green infrastructure focusing on how to obtain a maximum return-on-investment so that projects are streamlined and delivered at least cost, while retaining the viability of the network. The four-day course highlights leadership and stakeholder engagement, financing and network management, legal and regulatory issues, and support tools for the optimization of the decision-making process. Hear from expert green infrastructure practitioners as they discuss lessons learned on creating success and overcoming challenges, explore trends in implementation from urban to regional scales, and learn about the latest applications of green infrastructure as related to climate change, water, transportation, and ecosystem services.

Course Objectives

  • Explore trends and applications of Green Infrastructure implementation strategies from the urban/ site scale to the regional/landscape scale

  • Survey the critical components of the implementation process including sustained leadership and stakeholder engagement, priority setting and decision-making, and financing
  • Showcase implementation tools for the management and maintenance of networks, overcoming legal liability and regulatory barriers, and working with existing plans
  • Explore implementation strategies for green infrastructure as it relates to water quality / quantity issues, climate change adaptation, and transportation and grey infrastructure project delivery

Registration Instructions:

To apply, please complete and submit the online application form by Friday, June 15th. Please note that space is limited for attendance of this pilot course. Participants will be notified of acceptance no later than June 22nd.

Target Audience:

This advanced course is designed to be a collaborative learning experience for entities involved in the implementation of green infrastructure networks. Professionals should be well versed in the concepts and principles of green infrastructure; this course will be applicable to individuals from a variety of disciplines, sectors, and scales (i.e., national, regional, statewide, local). Completion of the GI 101 course (Strategic Conservation Planning Using a Green Infrastructure Approach) is recommended, but not required, as a prerequisite to attend this course.

Course Length:

3.5 days

Course Tuition:

$175.00

Lodging and Meals Information:

Lodging and meals are available at NCTC for $129/night (inclusive). Instructions to reserve lodging will be provided to confirmed participants.

Contact Information:

Please contact Kris Hoellen (khoellen@conservationfund.org / 304-876-7462) for additional information about this pilot course.

Other Information:

This course is offered by The Conservation Fund in partnership with the Federal Highway Administration and the US Fish & Wildlife Service.

Video: What Is Green Infrastructure?

Do you know what green infrastructure is, really? Watch our video to find out what people think of green infrastructure and learn from the Fund's Will Allen exactly what we mean when we use the term.

 

Green Infrastructure Webinar Series

The Conservation Fund, with support from the US Forest Service, is hosting a series of free webinars starting in September that will present cutting-edge topics on green infrastructure planning initiatives and applications.

WEBINAR #3 ARCHIVE: Military Implementation of Green Infrastructure

Representatives from the US Air Force, US Army, and US Marine Corps discussed how green infrastructure is being used on their installations to support broader sustainability goals.

Presentations:

Additional Resources:


WEBINAR #2 ARCHIVE: International Applications of Green Infrastructure

This webinar highlighted the latest in how green infrastructure is being implemented in the European Union and in South America from leading practitioners!

Presentations:


WEBINAR #1 ARCHIVE: Using Green Infrastructure to Prevent Disease Vectors

This webinar explored how Green Infrastructure contributes to human health through the prevention of transmission of disease vectors through ecosystem management and land use strategies.

Presentations:

Related Resources:


Green Infrastructure Transect

 

Green Infrastructure Transect Graph

 

Photo: Courtesy of TCH and the Center for Applied Transect Studies

Image shows detail of how green infrastructure works on different scales.

 

The Conservation Fund and Green Infrastructure

Just as we need smart growth to strategically direct development, we need "smart conservation." Smart conservation allows communities to grow while maintaining a healthy environment. That's green infrastructure.

Infrastructure is often thought of in terms of highways and power grids or gas pipelines. This infrastructure allows people to commute to work, watch television, and use washing machines without having to worry about how or what makes this possible. In much the same way, green infrastructure provides crucial services, such as clean air, drinking water and local food, to communities. These are known as ecosystem services. Green infrastructure planning identifies areas where nature is benefiting communities and ensures those areas are protected.

In recent years, the term "green infrastructure" has been used to refer to everything from green roofs to more ecologically friendly stormwater management systems. While these definitions differ, they all underscore that our built environment and our ecological environment are connected.

Green infrastructure network

 

At The Conservation Fund, we see green infrastructure as a network of natural areas and open spaces—woodlands, wetlands, trails and parks—that conserves ecosystems, helps sustain clean air and water and provides many other benefits to people and wildlife.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Green infrastructure graph

 

We also think of green infrastructure as a process—a way to identify the best lands to accommodate development and infrastructure while also considering the best lands to conserve. This planning approach is a collaborative effort that engages a broad community of both conservation and development leaders. Regional governments, land trusts, private organizations and others can lead green infrastructure planning efforts.

(Click image to enlarge)


Click here to learn more about our Strategic Conservation Services.

 

 

What is our green infrastructure approach?

The Conservation Fund draws from its strategic conservation toolkit to help city and county planners, regional and watershed organizations, natural resource agencies and nonprofits craft strategies that balance land protection and development. The results of a green infrastructure planning process are often maps, posters and reports that articulate a vision of a healthy community that benefits humans and nature.

Over the past decade, green infrastructure planning has evolved from a novelty practice in specific locations into a national planning method. The Fund has helped make this evolution happen, bringing green infrastructure to communities across the United States. Diverse communities and regions ranging from the North Star Borough in Alaska to Salt Lake City, Utah, to Indianapolis, Indiana and Jefferson County, West Virginia, all are in varying stages of green infrastructure planning processes.

How can green infrastructure benefit your community?

Green infrastructure offers many significant benefits. When there is an increase in the amount of land for natural stormwater retention, communities become more disaster resistant. Public health improves when residents have expanded access to walking and biking trails. Green infrastructure also can reduce the erosion of precious top soil, which aids local farms. The entire region benefits when a collection of local farms can provide healthy food. Working farms—and forests—also have a significant impact on local economies by providing jobs, aiding tourism and supporting local manufacturing.

Green Infrastructure and Mitigation

Today, green infrastructure planning is rewriting the process for how to undertake mitigation for gray infrastructure projects. When a large public works project, such as a highway or a natural gas line, affects a federally listed rare and endangered species or damages a wetland, those impacts must be compensated for through the protection or restoration of alternative habitat. In the past, mitigation often resulted in the protection of marginal habitat that did not serve the best interests of the impacted species. Green infrastructure networks provide an opportunity to find the best mitigation sites and help to identify mitigation opportunities that at the same time advance community planning objectives.

Leadership

From its hallmark book "Green Infrastructure" and its Better Models publications to professional training courses offered through the Conservation Leadership Network, the Fund brings the nation’s foremost strategic conservation specialists to America’s towns, counties and states.

In 2011, The Conservation Fund successfully completed a project supported by a Section 6 Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund grant entitled “Determining Mitigation Needs for NiSource Natural Gas Transmission Facilities—Implementation of the Multi-Species Habitat Conservation Plan (MSHCP).”  We developed a geographic ecosystem-based decision support framework that helps find the best locations for mitigation for impacted federal listed species addressed by the MSHCP. This transparent, defensible decision-making process for selecting mitigation projects serves as a model for future strategic mitigation efforts to harmonize green and gray infrastructure. Learn more about the NiSource project.

The Fund produced a 15-page implementation plan that is available for download as a PDF

America’s Best Results

The Conservation Fund is helping communities nationwide maintain connected networks of conservation lands while accommodating development.

 

 

GreenInfrastructure.Net

The Fund started GreenInfrastructure.Net with funding from USDA Cooperative Forestry and the Surdna Foundation as a resource and clearinghouse for information about implementing the green infrastructure approach. The Green Infrastructure Work Group, a collection of local, state and federal government agencies and nongovernmental organizations, also provided support. The Work Group originally came together in August 1999 to begin developing a training program that would help communities and their partners make green infrastructure an integral part of local and regional plans and community decisions. The Web site features case studies, publications, training courses and links to other resources.

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