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Streets as new places to bring together both humans and plants: examples from Paris and Montpellier (France)
Authors:Patricia Pellegrini  Sandrine Baudry
Institution:Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Département Hommes, Natures, Sociétés, UMR Eco-Anthropologie et Ethnobiologie, 57 rue Cuvier, 75231Paris Cedex 05, France, ppellegrini1@yahoo.fr, and sbaudry@unistra.fr
Abstract:Greening public city space is a growing issue in France. With examples drawn from Paris and Montpellier, this article seeks to understand what happens when city-dwellers green the public space outside their door and when policies encourage spontaneous flora on the street. Plants were already part of ancient cities and have been a tool for urban planning since the nineteenth century leading to the development of public green spaces and street-tree planting. Urban ecology sparked an interest for spontaneous flora in the 1980s. Public policies concerning water, climate, and biodiversity have been trying to take this unbidden vegetation into consideration since the beginning of this century. Besides, the social sciences have shown that city-dwellers are interested in plants to embellish their balcony, and in city gardens and parks. We tried to find out if this vegetation can be more than just a tool to plan, to green, to bring biodiversity, and to beautify urban space. We argue that letting planted and unbidden flora colonize sidewalks and allowing people to act directly on it brings residents and plants to co-inhabit and co-domesticate the streets, and challenges the timelessness of a city by introducing a life cycle.
Keywords:city greening  street tree gardening  unbidden/spontaneous flora  urban flora  streets  France
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