Five conceptual land use scenarios for the peri-urban zone
Residents and people who farm on the outskirts of Otautahi Christchurch were asked to rank five different peri-urban designs. The infographic shows the findings of these rankings from most-preferred (top) to least-preferred (bottom).
1. Multifunctional green belt. This green belt acts as a buffer to the rural farms, and includes such activities as public open spaces, community gardens, sports fields, allotments, walking tracks, native plantings, stormwater management zones and playgrounds. The greenbelt is publicly accessible.
2. Urban farms connected by green corridors. This design sees existing public open spaces converted to farms, along with any new residential development required to include planned urban farms. These farms would be linked by public right of ways and green corridors. The farms here would be small and diverse with a focus on supplying locals.
3. Low impact farming belt. This scenario consists of organic, small scale, plant-based farms that produce kai primarily for the local market. While the belt itself would not be publicly accessible, it would host a range of community food outreach such as farmers markets.
4. Hard urban/rural boundary. This approach sees housing and urban growth as being limited to the existing footprint of the urban area, to protect the fertile soil that surrounds the township and leave it for commercial farmers to produce food on. In this scenario, the food produced is mainly for export.
5. Farm-based neighbourhoods. This concept sees farming as the dominant landscape in the peri-urban zone. High density housing corridors would sit between farms. The farms closest to the existing township and dense housing areas would focus on supplying locals, but the farms further away from housing areas would focus more on export.
Funding
Funded by the New Zealand Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment’s Our Land and Water National Science Challenge (Toitu te Whenua, Toiora te Wai), as part of the project Peri-Urban Potential
History
Publication date
2024-06-16Project number
- Non revenue
Language
- English
Does this contain Māori information or data?
- No