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© <strong>Carsten</strong> <strong>Fröhlich</strong> / PIXELIO<br />

© Friedrich Frühling / PIXELIO<br />

© sassi / PIXELIO<br />

Nature<br />

conservation<br />

in urban areas<br />

the competition<br />

“Federal Nature<br />

Conservation<br />

Capital”<br />

Nature does not end where built-up areas begin. Rather, nature is<br />

returning to our towns and cities. A little more of the wilderness<br />

is moving into our urban landscapes. Species-rich habitats are<br />

being created, rivers are once again flowing more freely, wild<br />

flowers are flourishing in the strips of grass between roads and<br />

footpaths, parks and woodlands are being allowed to develop<br />

more naturally. Nature conservation is part of the urban identity.<br />

Stadt Bamberg<br />

In 2007 the German Federal<br />

Agency for Nature Conservation<br />

supported the “Federal Nature<br />

Conservation Capital” competition<br />

organised by Deutsche Umwelthilfe<br />

e.V. One hundred and fifteen local<br />

authorities took part, including<br />

large cities such as Berlin,<br />

Hamburg and Munich as well as<br />

many small towns and villages. The<br />

winner was the city of Heidelberg.<br />

Ninety-five towns and villages<br />

were awarded the title of “Nature<br />

Conservation Local Authority” in<br />

recognition of their efforts.<br />

Ariane Meier<br />

This positive trend is being actively<br />

supported and promoted by many<br />

local authorities. Despite the<br />

increasing shortage of public funds,<br />

nature conservation in Germany’s<br />

cities and urban areas is rich and<br />

varied, as local authorities from all<br />

over Germany have recently proved.<br />

Federal Agency<br />

for Nature<br />

Conservation<br />

GRÜN BERLIN Park und Garten GmbH<br />

Stadt Münster<br />

Gertrud Hein<br />

© Dieter Haugk / PIXELIO<br />

Gertrud Hein<br />

Species<br />

conservation<br />

in urban areas<br />

Examples from the<br />

competition “Federal<br />

Nature Conservation<br />

Capital”<br />

Urban areas are made up of a varied mosaic of different<br />

structures and types of land use, which provide a range of<br />

ecological niches. As a result, species diversity in urban areas<br />

is often very high and exceeds that of surrounding areas of<br />

comparable size. The level of species diversity in Berlin makes<br />

the capital city one of the most species-rich areas in Germany.<br />

Many local authorities have specific species conservation<br />

programmes or action plans designed to protect rare or<br />

threatened species or secure and develop biotopes. Local<br />

authorities can often contribute to the protection of individual<br />

species in urban areas by very simple means.<br />

© Templermeister / PIXELIO<br />

Jürgen Gerdes / Stadt Bamberg<br />

For example, the city of<br />

Bamberg has installed nest<br />

supports on old factory<br />

buildings to create an urban<br />

habitat for peregrine falcons<br />

and swifts. In the city of Halle<br />

an der Saale, nest supports<br />

of varying types have been<br />

fitted to redundant electrical<br />

transformer towers, enabling<br />

barn owls and kestrels to move<br />

into the area. Urban areas<br />

often harbour a large number<br />

of sites suitable for species<br />

such as bats and swifts, but<br />

these habitats are frequently<br />

destroyed by renovation or<br />

rebuilding. This is why, when<br />

house facades were renovated<br />

in the town of Güstrow, suitable<br />

openings at roof level were<br />

retained.<br />

Jens Schiller<br />

Eberhard Menz<br />

Federal Agency<br />

for Nature<br />

Conservation<br />

Stadt Halle (Saale)<br />

© terramara / PIXELIO<br />

Pit Zsivanovits<br />

Water in<br />

urban areas<br />

Pit Zsivanovits<br />

Examples from<br />

the competition<br />

“Federal Nature<br />

Conservation Capital”<br />

Streams in urban areas are often channelled through pipes<br />

and scarcely visible. Now new space is being created for many<br />

watercourses. There is new awareness of the value of open<br />

and natural waters – particularly in inner-city areas, where<br />

they provide city dwellers with places to encounter nature and<br />

contribute significantly to the local quality of life.<br />

Open waters provide particular opportunities for experiencing<br />

nature. In built-up areas restoring waters to a more natural<br />

state often requires a great deal of work. But the task is very<br />

rewarding, because near-natural waters add a new quality to<br />

wildlife habitats.<br />

For example, in Soest the area in the<br />

town centre around the source of the<br />

Soest stream had been completely<br />

built over; the stream’s source<br />

was re-exposed and a naturalistic<br />

stream bed was created where the<br />

watercourse had previously been<br />

forced into a channel. In the town of<br />

Wernigerode, 13 weirs were adapted<br />

in order to make the Holtemme<br />

Planungsbüro Stelzig /Soest stream passable for fish such as the<br />

brown trout, which is featured on the<br />

town’s coat of arms.<br />

Rainwater often flows from sealed<br />

surfaces direct into the sewerage.<br />

In its development plans, the city<br />

of Freiburg im Breisgau therefore<br />

specifies that decentral drainage<br />

into the ground should be the norm<br />

for areas of new development.<br />

This enables residents to regain<br />

the experience of water as an<br />

elemental substance.<br />

Jens Schiller<br />

Federal Agency<br />

for Nature<br />

Conservation<br />

Jens Schiller<br />

Stadt Bamberg<br />

Jens Schiller


Stadt Bamberg<br />

Matthias Herbert<br />

Wilderness<br />

in urban areas<br />

Examples from the<br />

competition<br />

“Federal Nature<br />

Conservation Capital”<br />

Urban green spaces can be more than just closely mown areas<br />

of lawn. Amidst the concrete of the city they can provide a piece<br />

of wilderness and a habitat for many plants and animals. Such<br />

areas are important in many ways. They help to regulate the<br />

urban climate, reduce noise and aid water retention. At the same<br />

time they provide convenient leisure space for those who live<br />

nearby.<br />

Stadt Münster<br />

Jens Schiller<br />

Oases of wilderness can develop<br />

in urban areas if land is left<br />

completely unused for long<br />

periods. At the end of the 1990s<br />

Berlin finally awarded conservation<br />

status to a large vacant site in the<br />

middle of the city. On the roughly<br />

18-hectare site of a former railway<br />

shunting yard, dry grassland,<br />

communities of tall herbaceous<br />

perennials and areas of dense<br />

woodland had developed largely<br />

undisturbed over some 40 years.<br />

Stadt Münster<br />

By sowing areas to grass, local<br />

authorities can do much to make green<br />

spaces more natural, often with an<br />

associated reduction in maintenance<br />

needs and costs. For example, the town<br />

of Rastatt has created species-rich<br />

flower meadows on several hectares<br />

of urban land; this area has become an<br />

important haven for wild bees. In the<br />

town of Münster, mixtures of wildflower<br />

and meadow seeds have for some time<br />

been sown along the edges of roads<br />

and tracks, so that the area now has<br />

colourful and species-rich verges that<br />

are adapted to their specific location.<br />

Federal Agency<br />

for Nature<br />

Conservation<br />

GRÜN BERLIN Park und Garten GmbH<br />

GRÜN BERLIN Park und Garten GmbH<br />

GRÜN BERLIN Park und Garten GmbH<br />

Torsten Wilke<br />

Torsten Wilke<br />

Torsten Wilke<br />

Encountering<br />

nature in<br />

urban areas<br />

Examples from the<br />

competition “Federal<br />

Nature Conservation<br />

Capital”<br />

The opportunity to experience and understand the diversity of<br />

nature fosters an attitude by which people treat our environment<br />

with care. Many people encounter nature only within built-up<br />

areas. Particularly for our children, urban areas need to include<br />

places in which people can get as close as possible to nature in<br />

its original form. Towns and districts in Germany are particularly<br />

active in this field.<br />

In Eckernförde, the sealed surface was<br />

removed from a commercial brownfield<br />

site covering 1.6 hectares in the town<br />

and the site was transformed into a<br />

natural play area with a hedge maze,<br />

water play area and climbing facilities.<br />

A quarter of the area has been left free<br />

for natural succession.<br />

Heidelberg has created a milestone<br />

in environmental education with its<br />

Stadt Eckernförde<br />

woodland nature trail, which focuses<br />

on fun and on the opportunity to<br />

experience the forest through the<br />

senses.<br />

Children and young people spend<br />

a large proportion of their time<br />

in educational surroundings.<br />

The town of Prenzlau has taken<br />

account of this in the extensive<br />

renovation and re-designing of<br />

the grounds of a primary school.<br />

A monotonous school yard has<br />

become a varied and interesting<br />

place with opportunities for<br />

play, sport and encounters with<br />

nature. A special feature is that<br />

all the children of the town have<br />

unrestricted access to the grounds<br />

seven days a week.<br />

Stadt Freiburg im Breisgau<br />

Federal Agency<br />

for Nature<br />

Conservation<br />

Stadt Freiburg im Breisgau<br />

Stadt Prenzlau<br />

Torsten Wilke<br />

Gertrud Hein<br />

Gertrud Hein<br />

Biodiversity<br />

in village settings<br />

Cultural landscapes in rural areas host a great diversity of animal<br />

and plant species. These also include old crop varieties and<br />

domesticated animal breeds. If one still knows swallows or bats,<br />

one has in many places no more idea of medicinal plants growing<br />

in the wild (such as the Herzgespann) or old apple varieties (such<br />

as the Gute Marianne).<br />

Gertrud Hein<br />

Gertrud Hein<br />

A richly structured cultural landscape<br />

is the best guarantor of biodiversity<br />

conservation. This in turn depends<br />

upon creative ideas and viable<br />

strategies for the utilisation of such<br />

diversity. Involving local people<br />

plays a key role. Biological diversity<br />

is increasingly being perceived as a<br />

part of regional identity and as a part<br />

of what creates a sense of home.<br />

Bund Heimat und Umwelt (BHU),<br />

the German federation of heritage<br />

conservation associations, is one of<br />

the institutions working to preserve<br />

biological diversity in villages. Its work<br />

last year also received support from<br />

the BfN. Further information on this is<br />

available at: www.bhu.de<br />

Gertrud Hein<br />

Land uses and structures are changing<br />

apace. As a result, such organisms<br />

are increasingly disappearing – often<br />

unnoticed – from village environments.<br />

A lack of knowledge of habitat and<br />

species diversity is amplifying the<br />

impacts of this change upon village<br />

lifeworlds.<br />

Federal Agency<br />

for Nature<br />

Conservation<br />

Gertrud Hein<br />

Gertrud Hein<br />

Gertrud Hein

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