Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription or Fee Access

Identification of Ecological Open Spaces of Urban Areas for Smart City Development: A Case of Jabalpur City in Madhya Pradesh in India

Sonal Tiwari

Abstract


The birth of a human habitation starts from an idea of shelter in a natural place which satisfies the parameter of food, water and security. These centers in course of time expand and utilize the neighborhood resources for land, minerals, forests, water from ground and surface water bodies, etc. thereby depleting the original values and in the process ending all vital open spaces which were once the cause of genesis. Identification and conservation of vital ecological open spaces is necessary for sustainable growth of urban areas. Open spaces are many times looked upon as leftover spaces after planning of other spaces, and are not seen as elementary for survival of towns and cities. The methodology of identification of these spaces differs on project basis and is mostly non-scientific considering the important natural processes of these areas. The study proposes a methodology for identification of these essential ecological open spaces. The methodology is applied to an urban area, i.e. Jabalpur city of Madhya Pradesh in India and identifies the critical natural open spaces and their present status. Smart city initiative would be a major force in redeveloping Indian cities. The understanding and incorporation of smart open spaces in cities development can be crucial in success of this program. In the research paper the criteria’s for identifying ecological open spaces are studied and applied in a case of Jabalpur city of Madhya Pradesh in India. A baseline assessment of existing state of open spaces and problems is done. The outcome is a mapping of open spaces and identification of essential buffers to safeguard and conserve these ecosystems is provided.

Full Text:

PDF

References


A. Baviskar. In the Belly of the River.

Oxford press; 1995.

AL. Vegad. Narmada: River of Beauty.

New Delhi: Penguin Books; 2008.

AR. Sankhyan, LN. Dewangan, S.

Chakraborty, S. Kundu, S. Prabha, R.

Chakravarty, GL. Badam. New human

fossils and associated findings from the

Central Narmada Valley, Curr Sci.

; 1461-1465p.

AS. Zev Naveh. Landscape Ecology:

Theory and Application. Springer;

BK. Dubey. A study of the Tribal

people and tribal areas of Madhya

Pradesh. Bhopal. 1967.

BN.

Sadry.

Fundamentals

of

Geotourism with special emphasis on

Iran.

GL. Badam. The Central Narmadā

Valley: A Study in Quaternary

Palaeontology and Allied Aspects.

Bhopal: Indira Gandhi Rashtriya

Manav Sangrahalaya. 2007.

Guidelines for riparian corridors on

waterfront land. New South Wales:

Government; 2012.

IA.

Erdeli.

Landscape

research,GeolandsGeotour. 2015.

J. Kim. An Integrative Area Selection

Method for Biodiversity Conservation

in the DMZ and the CCZ of South

Korea. South Korea; 2008.

J. Sagar. India's water economy: law &

sustainable development. CII Int Conf

India's Water Econ Law. 2007.

JS Wenger, AH. Roy, CR. Jackson,

ES. Bernhardt, TL. Carter, S. Filoso,

CA. Gibson, WC. Hession, SS.

Kaushal, E. Martí, JL. Meyer, MA.

Palmer, MJ. Paul, AH. Purcell, A.

Ramírez, AD. Rosemond, KA.

Schofield, EB. Sudduth, CJ. Walsh.

Twenty-six key research questions in

urban

stream

ecology,

Am

BentholSoc.2009.

KS. Unni. Ecology of river Narmada.

New Delhi: APH Publishing; 1996.

KK. Chakravarty,GL. Badam. River

Valley Cultures of India. Bhopal:

Indira Gandhi Rashtriya Manav

Sangrahalay; 2005.

M. Buch. Forests of Madhya Pradesh.

Madhya Pradesh madhyam; 1991.

MF. Makhdoum. Landscape ecology

or environmental studies (Land

Ecology), J Int Environ Appl Sci.

; 147-160p.

MN. Buch. Forests the changing

scenario. National center for human

settlements.

Narmada Basin. New delhi: Central

water commision, ISRO; 2014.

PM.

Sarangapani.

Indigenising

Curriculum. Questions posed by the

Baiga vaidya .

Riparian Areas: Functions and

Strategies for Management. NAP;

R. Lowrance. (1997). Water Quality

Functions of Riparian Forest Buffers in

Chesapeake Bay Watersheds, Environ

Manag.1997.

RV. Russell. The Tribes and Castes of

the Central Provinces of India.

London: Macmillan and Co;1916.

Tiwari

SA. Mohite. Impact of land use

changes on riparian habitats in

panchganga river system, Proc Int

Conf SWRDM.2012.

TS.

Aikaterini

Gkoltsiou.

An

interdisciplinary analysis of tourist

landscape structure, Tourismos: J

Tourism. 2012.

W.

Judith.

Development

and

Dispossession in the Narmada Valley.

Pearson Education India; 2010.

YG. Malhotra (2001). Cultural and

Ecological Dimensions of Sacred

Groves of India. Retrieved 2014, from

himalayanconnections.org/Malhotra_2

_CultureEcologySacredGrovesIndi

a_IAS.pdf.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.