29 research outputs found
Application of new methods of environment analysis and assessment in landscape audits : case studies of urban areas like Czestochowa, Poland
Following the 2000 European Landscape Convention, a new act strengthening landscape protection
instruments has been in force since 2015. It sets forth legal aspects of landscape shaping (Dziennik Ustaw 2015, poz.
774) and introduces landscape audits at the province level. A landscape audit consists in identification and
characterization of selected landscapes, assessment of their value, selection of so-called priority landscapes and
identification of threats for preservation of their value. An audit complies with GIS standards. Analyses use source
materials, i.e. digital maps of physical-geographical mesoregions, current topographic maps of digital resources of
cartographic databases, latest orthophotomaps and DTMs, maps of potential vegetation, geobotanic regionalization,
historic-cultural regionalization and natural landscape types, documentation of historical and cultural values and
related complementary resources. A special new methodology (Solon et al. 2014), developed for auditing, was tested
in 2015 in an urban area (Myga-Piatek et al. 2015). Landscapes are characterized by determining their analytic
(natural and cultural) and synthetic features, with particular focus on the stage of delimitation and identification of
landscape units in urban areas. Czestochowa was selected as a case study due to its large natural (karst landscapes of
the Czestochowa Upland, numerous forests, nature reserves) and cultural (Saint Mary’s Sanctuary, unique urban
architecture) potential. Czestochowa is also a city of former iron ore and mineral resources exploitation, still active
industry, dynamic urban sprawl within former farming areas, and dynamically growing tourism. Landscape
delimitation and identification distinguished 75 landscape units basing on uniform landscape background (uniform
cover and use of the land). Landscape assessment used a new assessment method for anthropogenic transformation of
landscape – the indicator describing the correlation between the mean shape index (MSI) and the Shannon diversity
index (SHDI) (Pukowiec-Kurda, Sobala 2016). Particular threats and planning suggestions, useful in development of
urban areas, were presented for selected priority landscapes