Monthly Archives: April 2017
News
Virtual Forum: Water-Wastewater and Stormwater-Green Infrastructure, Pt. 1
Join us today, Friday, 4/14, for a discussion on: Water-Wastewater and Stormwater-Green Infrastructure, Pt.1:
Led by: Dr. Paige Novak (University of Minnesota) & Dr. Lut Raskin (University of Michigan)
Discussing: What does (and can and should) wastewater treatment look like in the context of an integrated, distributed FEWS network?
Friday April 14, 2:30 to 4:30 PM Central
To view or join the discussion on Friday: Join Here, Access Code: 383-419-437.
These lectures and discussions are part of a course offered by the MSSTEP Program and the Sustainable Healthy Cities Network, Infrastructure Transformations for Sustainable Healthy Cities: Design and Policy.
News
Virtual Forum: Richard Plunz and Dana Boyer discuss Urban Agriculture and Food Systems
Join us Wednesday, 4/12, for a discussion on: Urban Agriculture and Food Systems, Pt. 2:
Led by: Prof. Richard Plunz (Columbia University) Discussing: The Food System in New York City &
Dana Boyer (PhD, University of Minnesota) Discussing: What is the Contribution of City Actions on Environmental Impacts on Urban Food Systems?
Wednesday April 12, 11:15 to 12:30 PM Central
To view or join the discussion on Friday: Join Here, Access Code: 383-419-437.
These lectures and discussions are part of a course offered by the MSSTEP Program and the Sustainable Healthy Cities Network, Infrastructure Transformations for Sustainable Healthy Cities: Design and Policy.
News
Student Feature: Ecosystem Services of Urban Farms by Xinyu Liu and Varsha Gopalakrishnan
Xinyu Liu and Varsha Gopalakrishnan, PhD students in Prof. Bhavik Bakshi’s group at The Ohio State University work on integrating the role of ecosystem services into engineering design and decision making. Their work is motivated by the thinking that all engineered products and processes can be economically viable while respecting ecological limits. They use concepts from the fields such as Process Systems Engineering, Life Cycle Assessment, and Ecological Modeling to expand the boundary of traditional engineering methods to include ecosystems and to design systems that operate within nature’s carrying capacity. Ultimately, this research work aims to develop synergies between technological and ecological systems to meet human needs while ensuring sustainability and resilience.
The scale of problems they address varies spatially and temporally, across individual equipment to the life cycle and across technologies and ecosystems. Some of the problems they have focused on include designing integrated networks of technological and ecological systems for industrial plants, developing a theoretical framework to account for ecosystem services in life cycle assessment and life cycle evaluation of several emerging technologies.
As a part of the SRN project, Xinyu and Varsha are interested in understanding the ecosystem services and disservices from different forms of urban farming across multiple cities in the world. Farming activities are associated with a bundle of ecosystem services, such as food provisioning, carbon sequestration and water quality regulation. Considering multiple services simultaneously will prevent the impact shifting to other services, thus enabling more informative decision making. They are interested in analyzing multiple scenarios to understand the benefits of investing in green infrastructure like community gardens and urban farms. This work contributes to the integrated SRN framework by providing quantitative indicators to assess environmental sustainability and linking it to human well-being and livability.