|
What
are the benefits of natural landscaping ?
The numerous
potential benefits of natural landscaping may be divided into economic,
environmental and educational/recreational themes. These categories are
the focus of this chapter.
Economic
Benefits
The" bottom
line" can be a strong motivation for installing and maintaining natural
landscaping instead of a conventional lawn. The savings that can be realized
through natural landscaping for municipalities, park districts, school-districts,
corporations, and institutions campuses are dramatically illustrated in
the examples below, where approximately nine-tenths of the cost of conventional
landscape maintenance was avoided! For some organizations, reducing site
maintenance costs may be a significant factor in being able to balance
the budget.
- Reduced costs
of landscape installation and maintenance
Cost
data show that conventional installation of sodded turf grasses may exceed
$12,000 per acre. Planting turf grass seeds may cost in the range of $4,000
to $8,000 per acre. This contrasts with installation costs of $2,000 to
$4,000 per acre for seeding native prairie grasses and forbs. Planting
plugs of native plants considerably increases installation costs but this
may be preferred in selected locations where a "head start" is desired.
Native plant
installation costs can often be reduced where the project sponsor or co-sponsor
is a public or private entity with plant propagating capabilities. Also,
volunteers are often willing to assist in the installation and maintenance
of native landscapes, which further reduces costs.
The major savings
of natural landscaping is the lost cost of landscape maintenance. The
combined costs of installation and maintenance for natural landscape over
a ten year period may be one fifth of the costs for conventional landscape
maintenance.
Native perennial
plants are well adapted to the local soils and to environmental conditions
such as summer heat and drought. The costs of the following maintenance
factors are significantly reduced or eliminated through natural landscaping:
labor, water, fertilizer, herbicides, insecticides, fungicides, replanting
annual flowers, and mowing. In some locations the costs of water for sprinkling
can be very high and are avoided by natural landscaping. The reduced consumption
of fossil fuel for lawn maintenance equipment is an additional benefit.
Typical original
maintenance requirements of natural landscapes are quite simple, involving
annual mowing or burning, and some weed removal (mostly in the few years
after installation).
In the Appendix
are detailed installation and maintenance cost analyses based on the project
experience of firms with experience with natural landscapes.
- Reduced expense
for stormwater management facilities
In
many locations, natural landscaping can accommodate storm and flood waters
thereby reducing the need for expensive, "highly engineered" conveyance
and detention facilities. Drainage swales in particular cost considerably
less to install than storm sewers. Where practical, curbs and gutters
can be eliminated, or the curbs can be slotted. To the extent that natural
drainage measures can increase infiltration of stormwater, they will reduce
runoff volumes and costs of downstream conveyance and detention structures.
Detention basins
designed with natural landscaping to resemble wetlands or natural lake
systems reduce costs over conventional basins. Native wetland and prairie
vegetation eliminate the need for expensive riprap stabilization and paved
low flow channels. Further, natural vegetation in detention basin bottoms
and on side slopes is less expensive to maintain than conventional turf
landscaping, in addition to being a more reliable soil stabilizer.
- Creation
of a distinctive community image that strengthens real estate markets
High
quality natural features such as river corridors and woodlands strengthen
the identity of a community or neighborhood. Distinctive natural landscaping
that preserves the unique characteristics of a community is a unique community
asset.
Real estate
within a distinctive landscape setting, if done well, can possess a marketing
edge and positively affect property values. A community that appears to
care for a high quality environment establishes a marketing niche that
traditional area developments cannot offer.
Natural landscaping
projects require materials, labor and professional services that generate
income as well as enhance the environment. Nurseries, landscape architects,
environmental restoration professionals, environmental groups, and neighborhood
organizations are increasingly responding to the market for natural landscaping
materials and professional expertise. Some inner-city neighborhood organizations
are considering the economic development potential of cultivating native
plants and seed products for environmental restoration projects. Sources
for natural landscaping materials must be from businesses rather than
from the "wild."
- Supports
the natural landscaping component of the "green industry."
There are many
opportunities for creative entrepreneurs in all aspects of natural landscaping.
Environmental
Benefits
In many
ways, natural landscaping reduces the stress that the "weed-free" lawn
places on clean air, clean water, soil stability and other environmental
qualities of life.
- Reduced soil
erosion
Natural
landscaping has distinct advantages over conventional turf grasses in
stabilizing easily erodible soils. Native plants are particularly effective
on steeply sloped sites, stream banks, and areas where moving water is
present. The roots of native prairie plants are very dense, fine, and
often very deep (in some cases, 5 to 10 feet in mature plants) and hold
soil well. By contrast, typical turf grass root systems are only four
to six inches deep.

Wetland vegetation
provides effective soil stabilization along streambanks and shorelines
by absorbing some of the erosive energy of flowing water and waves.
Native vegetation is finding a new use in "bioengineering" approaches
to slope stabilization. Recent demonstration projects for streambank and
shoreline stabilization, such as along the Skokie River in the Chicago
Botanic Garden, have successfully used native plants such as prairie cordgrass
and various willow species.
Deep root systems
of native grasses and forbs.
Note shallow root systems of conventional blue
grass turf at far left.
- Improved
water quality
Native
vegetation in naturalized drainage ways enhances the infiltration of contaminated
stormwater. The dense, deep root systems augment the permeability of the
soil and help the uptake of certain stormwater pollutants. Native vegetation
buffers are particularly effective along the edges of streams, lakes,
and wetlands. They can intercept runoff and subsurface water pollutants
from urban and agricultural land uses and construction sites. Emergent
and submerged wetland vegetation provides an additional benefit along
the edges of lakes and streams by serving as a growing surface for microorganisms.
These microorganisms break down certain pollutants thereby reducing their
harmful effects.
An additional
benefit of native vegetation landscaping is its ability to thrive without
fertilizers, or heavy use of pesticides and herbicides. Turf grass and
other conventional landscapes are heavily dependent on chemical applications,
and the excess chemicals inevitably find their way into our waterways
where they cause excessive plant growth and toxicity to fish and other
aquatic organisms.
Drainage of a site through a natural system, rather
than through storm sewers, dramatically reduces
pollution levels.
- Reduced air
pollution
Standard
lawn maintenance equipment creates significant amounts of air pollution.
Equipment such as lawn mowers , chain saws, leaf vacuums, and other fossil
fueled lawn maintenance equipment emit high levels of carbon monoxide,
hydrocarbons (VOCs) and nitrogen oxides, which contribute to the formation
of ground level ozone (smog), toxins and other particulates. USEPA estimates
that a gasoline powered lawn mower emits 11 times the air pollution of
a new car for each hour of operation. Gasoline lawn and power equipment,
on average, produce 5 percent of "smog" forming VOC in non-attainment
areas (such as the northeastern Illinois region). Smog is a noxious irritant
which impairs lung function and inhibits plant growth. In addition, the
"driver" of such equipment is typically positioned where exposure to such
carbon monoxide and toxic emissions is greatest.
Small gasoline
spills evaporate and pollute the air as well. USEPA estimates that every
summer, the few ounces spilled during each refueling of lawn and garden
equipment adds up to 17,000,000 gallons of gasoline nationwide.
Natural landscaping
can significantly reduce the need for fossil fueled lawn and garden equipment
and this reduces the associated air pollution and health risks. In addition,
the native plants themselves can help to improve air quality by reducing
particulates and gaseous air pollutants.
- Reduced noise
pollution
Noise
from lawn and gardening equipment has become a source of increasing dissatisfaction
in some communities. The use of natural landscapes reduce the use of this
equipment.
-Climatological
benefits
 |
| Planting
of vegetation improves climatological conditions. |
Trees and other vegetation
benefit the climate on three levels: human comfort, energy conservation,
and urban climates.
Human comfort.
Plants intercept infrared radiation directly by providing shade and indirectly
by covering surfaces that reflect or reradiate solar energy. Trees and
shrubs can channel air movement. Moving air feels cooler. In the winter,
windbreaks reduce the wind chill factor.
Energy Conservation.
Windbreaks on the north and west sides of buildings reduce winter heating
costs. In the summer, trees and other vegetation make non-air-conditioned
buildings more comfortable and reduce energy costs for air-conditioning.
- Reduced greenhouse
effect
Natural
vegetation can help to combat global climate change (the "greenhouse effect")
by removing carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere. Plants remove CO2
from the atmosphere and store the carbon in the body of the plant, the
root system and the soil.
Planting native
plants can facilitate this CO2 removal. The soils beneath the tallgrass
prairie can contain an immense amount of soil organic matter and nitrogen.
Studies have indicated that temperate prairie grasslands are superior
soil carbon sinks when compared to forests of similar climatic. It is
the combination of fire, plants, root depth distributions and microbes
that produce the large amount of soil carbon.
- Habitat restoration
and protection
 |
Conservation
buffers can help protect wildlife
habitat in a development. (Shaw et al., 1986 |
Due to extensive
urban and agricultural development, high quality natural communities cover
only .07% of Illinois' land and water, according to the Illinois Natural
Areas Inventory. With this decrease of habitats, many plants and animals
have lost the special conditions and requirements they need for their
survival.
Natural landscaping
plays a part in attracting native animals and re-establishing a natural
population of wildlife and the natural cycles within which they thrive.
In addition, natural landscaping can be used to create buffers which reduce
urban stresses and proximity of exotic species to high quality natural
areas.
Native insects,
including butterflies and moths, attract a wide array of songbirds, who
eat the insects and the plant seeds. If a restored prairie is large enough,
it might attract nesting grassland birds such as meadowlarks and bobolinks,
birds whose habitat is decreasing in most parts of their range in the
state. The degree of habitat value in natural landscaping depends on many
factors relating to the ability of a site to provide the conditions required
by specific plant and animal species. Site planning for natural landscaping
should strive to preserve existing wildlife habitats.
As part of
planning natural landscaping, it is desirable that an inventory of plant
and animal species currently using the site be taken. Where desirable
species are already using the site for nesting, phasing in a project by
keeping enough habitat to protect those species should be considered before
forging ahead with replanting the entire site.
Canada geese
have become pests in many city and suburban locations where there are
turf grass lawns in proximity to open water. A buffer of thick and tall
native plantings around the waterbody will discourage geese from grazing,
especially during the growing season when the plants are taller.
- Beautification
Though
it is difficult to quantify, beautification is an important reason, sometimes
the fundamental reason, for natural landscaping. Many people living or
working in natural landscapes appreciate the variety of textures, colors
and shapes of native plants and the dramatic progression of hues throughout
the seasons. The wildlife, especially the birds and butterflies attracted
to the plants, also enhance the aesthetic appeal of natural landscaping.
Educational
and Recreational Benefits
There is an old saying that:
" People will only
conserve what they love; that they will only love what they understand;
and that they will only understand what they are taught."
Natural landscaping
may not be the only way to demonstrate this old adage, but it is a powerful
instrument in our tool kit for the future.
- Conservation
education
Natural
landscaping puts people in touch with a variety of plants, and if the
plantings are native to the area, people can gain a sense of being in
a unique and special place. Natural landscapes are an invitation to appreciate
plant diversity, seasonal flowering cycles, sustainability of native landscapes,
and wildlife habitat, all of which are absent in conventional landscapes.
This familiarity can strengthen community support for habitat preservation
and restoration, environmental protection, and open space acquisition.
Municipalities,
school districts, park districts, and forest preserve districts are critical
entities for bringing natural landscaping into the public eye. This can
be done through educational programs such as nature walks and talks, exhibits,
and volunteer days sponsored by the above organizations. These opportunities
provide positive examples of public land management and increase the awareness
and understanding of the public about the community which they reside.
- Passive recreation
opportunities
Natural
landscapes provide recreational opportunities such as bird watching and
photography. The diverse colors, shapes, sounds, textures, odors, and
tastes found in the natural environment provide the observer with sensory
experiences not found in more sterile, traditional landscapes. Nature
offers both tranquility and excitement. It can serve as a place to relax,
a place of diversity and excitement. By incorporating native landscaping
throughout the community, it also offers the opportunity for children
to experience and learn from nature in their own yard and community.
- Enhanced
regional recreational corridors
|
|
Photo
courtesy of
Lake County Forest Preserve District |
Recreational activities
such as walking, running, bicycling and skating are extremely popular.
Increasingly, these activities are accommodated by local and regional
trails and greenways. Natural landscaping in greenways can help create
new attractive recreation areas, rejuvenate others, and provide connecting
corridors.
- Scientific
Study
Natural
landscapes provide scientists (and amateur observers) with numerous opportunities
for study. Research can lead to improved propagation techniques in urban
settings and improved availability of plant materials. Scientific study
can assess the impacts of urban development on native species and the
benefits of introducing native species on plant, animal and human communities.
Natural greenways provide opportunities for grade school, high school,
and community college students to study nature and carry out their own
research close to home.
|