S07 - Session O2 - Accessibility, visibility and connectivity between urbanites and edible landscape in the Persian gardens

S07 - Session O2 - Accessibility, visibility and connectivity between urbanites and edible landscape in the Persian gardens

Tuesday, August 16, 2022 5:00 PM to 5:15 PM · 15 min. (Europe/Paris)
Angers Congress Centre
S07 II International symposium on greener cities: improving ecosystem services in a climate-changing world (greencities2022)

Information

Authors: Majid Amanibeni *, Mohammad Reza Khalilnezha, Zhongwei Shen

In the lack of practical information on the design and implementation of the public and semi-public edible landscape at the site scale, especially in Iran, this paper investigates the detailed information on the accessibility of the edible fruits by exploring the Iranian historical prototype. The case study was selected from the World Heritage Persian Gardens, Akbarieh garden, which is located in the East of Iran. Initially established as a multifunctional landscape in Birajnd city about 200 years ago, the garden developed from food production to a complex web of applications, including museum, garden party, and ceremonies encounters. Therefore, the question is how the edible landscape at this traditional multifunctional landscape is preserved and how the public accessibility to the garden fruits is restricted? The authors applied a continuous/stop-motion walking method (CSM) inside the Akbarieh Garden to link the topic of under investigation with the perceived variations in the landscape. The research finds that the security of garden fruits has been provided through the application of four specific strategies. In more detail, there is the least contact between the visitor movement route and the garden's agricultural zone. Thus, the visitors inevitably could attain the edible fruits by passing through the seven hierarchical sequences which the edible landscape located at the last phase. Similarly, the vertical ornamental green planes function like blinders to constrain one's attention toward the garden fruits. Moreover, there is a hierarchy of dominance within the garden, which their supremacy as a clear sense of hierarchy concentrates the visitors' movement and views toward the mansion as well as along great axis length. Thus, the socio-environmental impacts of the fruits of this World Heritage garden is less than the modern urban edible landscapes where public accessibility, visibility and connectivity between urbanites and edible landscape are being regarded.

Type of sessions
Oral Presentations
Type of broadcast
In Replay (after IHC)In personIn remote
Keywords
cultural landscapeedible green infrastructurefood gardeninglandscape architecturePersian gardenurban ecosystem servicesUrban green spaces
Room
Cointreau Room - Screen 1

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