Resource Guide for Planning, Designing and Implementing Green Infrastructure in Parks
This Resource Guide provides basic principles and innovations in green stormwater infrastructure in support of implementation into parks and park systems nationwide. Written as a starting point for planners, designers, and decision-makers, the guide provides a design and management framework for integrating these green practices into park design, construction and maintenance. The report also offers quantifiable water quality benefits from green infrastructure, best practices in adaptation, and encourages integrated social equity goals.
The National Recreation and Park Association provides guidance in this report for conducting park assessments and pre-planning, including how to determine feasibility of employing green stormwater infrastructure given existing resources. They suggest including green stormwater infrastructure in a new park development or redevelopment project at the earliest planning stage in order to significantly reduce the total cost of planning and installation.
Resource Details
Related resources (by topic)
Shelterwood Collective
Shelterwood’s vision is to restore right relations between and within people and nature; and thereby create reverberating circles of ecosystem restoration and community healing that return land sovereignty to Black and Indigenous communities.
Soul Fire Farm
Soul Fire Farm is an Afro-Indigenous centered community farm committed to uprooting racism and seeding sovereignty in the food system. We raise and distribute life-giving food as a means to end food apartheid. With deep reverence for the land and…
Southeast [US Climate Reslience Toolkit]
The Southeast’s population faces increasing threats from rising sea levels and increased frequency, intensity, and duration of heat waves, which prompt greater risks of wildfires. These extreme weather events impact human health, ecosystems, economies, infrastructure, and food systems, particularly in…
Southern Great Plains [US Climate Reslience Toolkit]
Increasing frequency and intensity of precipitation, warmer ocean temperatures, extreme heat, and rising sea levels are degrading the air, lands, and waters that people in the Southern Great Plains rely on for economic, recreational, and cultural activities. These impacts compound…
Help us expand the Resource Hub
Share resources that you think would be a good addition to this tool and our team will review them for inclusion in future updates.