Measuring the 3-30-300 rule to help cities meet nature access thresholds

Publication date

2024-01-10

Authors

Browning, M
Locke, D
Konijnendijk, C
Labib, SMORCID 0000-0002-4127-2075ISNI 000000050734257X
Rigolon, A
Yeager, R
Bardhan, M
Berland, A
Dadvand, P
Helbich, MISNI 0000000443134439

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

The 3-30-300 rule offers benchmarks for cities to promote equitable nature access. It dictates that individuals should see three trees from their dwelling, have 30 % tree canopy in their neighborhood, and live within 300 m of a high-quality green space. Implementing this demands thorough measurement, monitoring, and evaluation methods, yet little guidance is currently available to pursue these actions. To overcome this gap, we employed an expert-based consensus approach to review the available ways to measure 3-30-300 as well as each measure's strengths and weaknesses. We described seven relevant data and processes: vegetation indices, street level analyses, tree inventories, questionnaires, window view analyses, land cover maps, and green space maps. Based on the reviewed strengths and weaknesses of each measure, we presented a suitability matrix to link recommended measures with each component of the rule. These recommendations included surveys and window-view analyses for the ‘3 component’, high-resolution land cover maps for the ‘30 component’, and green space maps with network analyses for the ‘300 component’. These methods, responsive to local situations and resources, not only implement the 3-30-300 rule but foster broader dialogue on local desires and requirements. Consequently, these techniques can guide strategic investments in urban greening for health, equity, biodiversity, and climate adaptation.

Keywords

3-30-300, Environmental equity, Geographic information system (GIS), Urban green space, Urban planning, Taverne, Pollution, Waste Management and Disposal, Environmental Engineering, Environmental Chemistry, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities, SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities

Citation

Browning, M, Locke, D, Konijnendijk, C, Labib, SM, Rigolon, A, Yeager, R, Bardhan, M, Berland, A, Dadvand, P, Helbich, M, Li, F, Li, H, James, P, Klompmaker, J, Reuben, A, Roman, L, Patwary, M, O'Neil-Dunne, J, Ossola, A, Wang, R, Yang, B, Yi, L, Zhang, J & Nieuwenhuijsen, M 2024, 'Measuring the 3-30-300 rule to help cities meet nature access thresholds', Science of the Total Environment, vol. 907, 167739. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.167739