Also, sycamores are salt, pest, and drought resistant, another reason they're damn near perfect urban trees.
About "green space." It is one of the worst architecture and planning euphemisms to enter the general lingo. It is as meaningless as "built space." Imagine a developer pointing at a map of a tract of land, saying, "Well, we'll going to put some built space here and here" and the community nods in approval because they enjoy being hip to the cool architectural jargon. Wouldn't you demand to know what kind of "built space?" A factory? A rowhouse? A mall? A gas station? A school? A ramp garage?
We should demand the same specificity when someone talks about "green space." Do you mean mulch and shrubbery strips? A formal square with a monument or fountain? A pointless grassy berm? An Olmstedian meadow? A nature preserve?
We'd all be able to see more clearly what kind of park designs work in cities and what kind do not, as Steel tries to do here, if we all purged "green space" from our vocabulary. As we see in the case above, "green space" is hardly an automatic urban amenity.
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