Many organisations and developers are taking positive action in response to the climate and biodiversity emergencies; committing to targets, devising strategies and ringfencing funds to restore and protect natural and cultural heritage, water resources and landscape systems impacted by development.
The challenge for these organisations is to ensure that environmental spending helps them to meet targets and key performance indicators, while delivering maximum benefits for biodiversity, communities, and the environment.
Restoring the landscape with nature-based solutions
Working with National Highways, Arup has designed Keyn Glas, a landscape scheme alongside the A30 in Cornwall that takes a regenerative approach to land management, restoring habitats and historic landscapes, increasing biodiversity, and reducing the risks of climate change impacts such as flooding.
Funded by National Highway’s Environmental Designated Funds, the scheme aims to look beyond standard road scheme mitigation by addressing and enhancing the wider landscape’s aesthetic, cultural and ecological conditions for generations to come.
Delivering greater impact across the landscape
The Keyn Glas concept features multiple individual environmental projects on farmland and estates extending up to 3km from the A30. These enhancements include natural flood management, restoration of wetlands and woodlands, and the creation of hedgerows and flower-rich grasslands. While each brings individual benefits, when stitched together across the landscape their impact combines to create an overall scheme greater than the sum of its parts. For example, hedgerow planting provides habitat for pollinating insects and rare and declining birds and mammals which, when connected with other new and existing habitats, creates wildlife corridors and improves the aesthetic and cultural character of the landscape. This manageable approach enabled phase one of the project to go from concept through design to completion within 18 months.