Towards greater private sector uptake on urban greenery in Melbourne

The City of Melbourne unveiled its Urban Forest Strategy in late 2013, setting out plans to rejuvenate and intensify the city’s urban greenery. As identified in the strategy, the community, both as public and private businesses, is expected to be an integral participant in the strategy. Recently, th...

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Main Authors: Ong, Boon Lay, Hes, Dominique, Aye, L., Fryd, Ole, Tuan, Duc-Ngo
Format: Conference Paper
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75642
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author Ong, Boon Lay
Hes, Dominique
Aye, L.
Fryd, Ole
Tuan, Duc-Ngo
author_facet Ong, Boon Lay
Hes, Dominique
Aye, L.
Fryd, Ole
Tuan, Duc-Ngo
author_sort Ong, Boon Lay
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The City of Melbourne unveiled its Urban Forest Strategy in late 2013, setting out plans to rejuvenate and intensify the city’s urban greenery. As identified in the strategy, the community, both as public and private businesses, is expected to be an integral participant in the strategy. Recently, the University of Melbourne was engaged by the City to collaborate in a study to investigate the perception and expectations of the private sector in terms of the uptake of urban greenery. The study involved two workshops where prepared presentations were used to initiate discussions and feedback. The key finding is that most research findings do not directly address business priorities. Analysis of the feedback indicated three areas for further investigation: the need to develop business cases pertinent to individual businesses, the need for a greenery standard, and the need to develop public-private partnerships in implementing urban greenery. We present our initial thoughts on these three areas and suggest some directions for future research.
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format Conference Paper
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:04:49Z
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-756422019-06-10T00:49:24Z Towards greater private sector uptake on urban greenery in Melbourne Ong, Boon Lay Hes, Dominique Aye, L. Fryd, Ole Tuan, Duc-Ngo The City of Melbourne unveiled its Urban Forest Strategy in late 2013, setting out plans to rejuvenate and intensify the city’s urban greenery. As identified in the strategy, the community, both as public and private businesses, is expected to be an integral participant in the strategy. Recently, the University of Melbourne was engaged by the City to collaborate in a study to investigate the perception and expectations of the private sector in terms of the uptake of urban greenery. The study involved two workshops where prepared presentations were used to initiate discussions and feedback. The key finding is that most research findings do not directly address business priorities. Analysis of the feedback indicated three areas for further investigation: the need to develop business cases pertinent to individual businesses, the need for a greenery standard, and the need to develop public-private partnerships in implementing urban greenery. We present our initial thoughts on these three areas and suggest some directions for future research. Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75642 restricted
spellingShingle Ong, Boon Lay
Hes, Dominique
Aye, L.
Fryd, Ole
Tuan, Duc-Ngo
Towards greater private sector uptake on urban greenery in Melbourne
title Towards greater private sector uptake on urban greenery in Melbourne
title_full Towards greater private sector uptake on urban greenery in Melbourne
title_fullStr Towards greater private sector uptake on urban greenery in Melbourne
title_full_unstemmed Towards greater private sector uptake on urban greenery in Melbourne
title_short Towards greater private sector uptake on urban greenery in Melbourne
title_sort towards greater private sector uptake on urban greenery in melbourne
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75642