GREEN CORRIDOR or GREENWAY?


In light of the lecture about the distinction between Greenways and Corridors, I thought that the emerging 'Green Corridor' http://www.greencorridor.ca/ in Windsor Ontario would be an interesting case to look at. The Green Corridor project is an artist driven, community-based collaboration between Canadian artist Noel Harding, the University of Windsor, and vario
us other community stakeholders. The plan is to redevelop the 'international bridge corridor' that links Canada to the United States at
the Windsor-Detroit border as part of a green infrastructure that links the people to the water and also improves the aesthetic of one of the busiest transport bridges along the border. The multi-disciplinary Green Corridor design team is revisioning the entire bridge corridor as an opportunity to engage the Windsor community in environmental landscape design and planning. This project is especially relevant to our course because the designs for the som
e of the key features of the entire Green Corridor were developed by students in a class at the University of Windsor! Working closely with artists, architects, engineers, scientists, and city officials, students at the University of Windsor were able to help design a 'nature bridge,' which is a vegetated pedestrian overpass that allows people to access a sensitive wetland area for educational purposes. How's that for some inspiration? Other features of the Green Corridor include the construction of a river turbine that generates power and an eco-learning house. This area of Windsor is also notable because it is close to the Ojibway Plains - "Ontario's largest and most important prairie-savanna sites," according to Tallgrass Ontario (http://www.tallgrassontario.org/PrairiePlaces_Ojibway.htm). Evidently, the Windsor area is not merely a transportation co
rridor but a site of ecological importance. Although the Green Corridor project is not a wildlife corridor in the strictest sense, it does stand to be an important greenway that allows people to commune with rare and beautiful pockets of native habitats that are threatened to become extinct. It seems that there is a fight going on to save the Ojibway Prarie Complex http://www.tallgrassontario.org/Publications/CPOWNews%203_29_05.pdfand hopefully the Green Corridor project can bring attention to the plight of this majestic landscape. I think I'll be taking a trip to the High Park savanna in the summer to appreciate our local piece of the prairie!
Enjoy the fine weather!
(^_^)Ping
P.S. I found a link to the website of Noel Harding (http://www.noelharding.ca/), the artist who worked on the Green Corridor in Windosr. It turns out that he also worked on an ecological design project, called Elevated Wetlands, in Toronto's Don Valley. The artwork is a solar-powered pump that draws rainwater to the the top of the vegetated sculpture to clean the water naturally before it is returned to the earth. An innovative marriage of art and ecology that urban designers all strive for. Plus, it was a community-based project, meaning that industry, government, students, and community members were involved, making it another excellent example of how participatory planning and collaborative art methods can be applied as tools of ecological landscape design and implementation.

2 Comments:
Hmm, I am curious about your reference to a distinction between greenways and green corridors. As the original positor of "biological corridors" 20 years ago while researching habitat fragmentation and preserve construction in Central America, I am currently developing a model for ultra urban landscape ecology which aims to preserve or restore biodiversity by linking green spaces with greenroofs and other forms of LID using corridor dynamics. DH.
By
Safari, at 12:14 PM
DH,
I am interested in this UULE model and would love more info. I am studying an MLA in Guelph and have a Biology undergrad. I am currently research greenlands design. Drop me a line at jchoquet@uoguelph.ca
cheers,
jonny c
By
jonnyc, at 5:38 PM
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