Researcher(s):
Aaron Fellows
ENVS course(s): 400, 499 Initiated: August 2015 Completed: May 2016 Go to project site
|
I examine the extent to which the values created by urban amenities shape the city around them, and to what extent their values are a product of their context. In doing so, I argue that a functionalist narrative of amenity value is overly simplistic. Considering the interrelationships between form and function, I offer, is a more useful approach. To support this notion, I focus on Portland, Oregon, and on trees as an urban amenity. In this respect, I investigate the extent to which trees function as an amenity in providing value for the city around them, and conceptualize the urban forest as a system of trees providing value throughout the city.