Section B
Green Spaces in Cities
Where do children play? Years ago, any open field, any vacant lot, any group of trees — these were the places where children played. As families left family farms, small towns, and the countryside, and moved into cities, the places for their children to play in became rarer. Children in the cities had few options, fewer choices of places to play.
In fact, all people's lives change a lot when they move to the city. In cities, homes are built on top of one another — in enormous apartment buildings. The feeling of private space and ownership no longer exists in houses literally piled one on the other.
Psychologists have been studying the changes people experience when they leave rural areas and move into urban environments. One clear finding from their studies is that people need green spaces for better mental health. Children can play on paved playgrounds. That's true. However, they just don't have as much fun as children in small towns. Without grass and trees and bushes and, yes, dirt and mud to get dirty in, children miss an important part of childhood. The human soul, it seems, needs to stay close to its roots.
Adults can plant lots of things like bulbs in window boxes and large containers. However, tending window boxes isn't the same as being an amateur gardener and growing peas, tomatoes and salad greens in a backyard garden. The lack of green space is now recognized and understood as a problem.
City planners — the people who design neighborhoods — have begun to work on a solution. They want to build more parks, but land in cities is quite costly. So they look for land that no one else wants. Along rivers, under power lines, near ditches and highways — these are the spaces that no one uses and they are everywhere. Why not use these unused spaces for green areas? Neighborhood groups have coordinated their efforts to clean up the trash or garbage. Soil from new building projects in the city has been trucked by lorries into these areas. This soil has been dumped along the sides of rivers, and strong walls have been erected to hold it there. Trees and bushes have been planted; the roots of these plants will hold the soil, too, and the green leaves make the area beautiful.
"People in and near cities have little opportunity to experience parks or unprotected open spaces, and that's becoming a problem," says Mister Ernest Cook, a senior vice president of the Trust for Public Land (TPL). This organization was started over twenty-one years ago. Its purpose is to protect land and public resources for people. In the past nineteen years, TPL has completed up to a thousand conservation projects in Canada and the United States.
In Portland, Maine, the land along the old train tracks near the coast has become a green belt of trails between areas characterized by housing developments and those characterized by downtown businesses. To Mister Charles Jordan, the director of the Portland Parks and Recreation Department, it's just a beginning. Jordan has plans for an environmental university — a huge urban park (5,000 acres ). It will include different environments, from canals and wetlands to forests. Jordan's plans include a network of trails and paths for people to use for excursions all over the city. He also wants to build a green belt from Portland, across Canada and the United States, all the way back to the Pacific Ocean. Communities across the continent could be connected by such a green belt.
Other cities have comparable projects. In Phoenix, Arizona, for instance, the sides of the Salt River bed that have washed away are becoming a park. In Baltimore, a long strip of land (which was used for dumping garbage) is becoming a series of biking and walking trails. These trails will link a dozen neighborhoods and the downtown business areas. In some cities, the bicycle paths connect every area to every other area. In Flagstaff, Arizona, a thousand miles of bike trails lead into the San Francisco Peaks, the highest summit in the state.
In other areas, planners have made places for bicycle trails and playgrounds, for public gardens and private garden plots, and paths for walking and running excursions. The costly result is a growing greenness in the cities and a healthier environment for all the civilians who live there.
Words: 728
NEW WORDS
vacant
a. 1. not filled or occupied; empty 未被占用的,空著的
2. (position or post) unfilled (職位、工作等)空缺的
3. showing no interest or activity 茫然的,空虛的
rare
a. 1. not often happening or seen, etc.; not common 稀有的,罕見(jiàn)的;冷僻的
2. not common and as a result sometimes valuable 稀罕的,珍奇的
option
n. 1. [C] a thing that is or may be chosen; a choice 供選擇的事物,可選擇的事物;選擇
2. [U] power or freedom of choosing; choice 選擇權(quán),選擇自由,選擇
enormous
a. very large 巨大的,龐大的,極大的
private
a. 1. of, belonging to or for the use of one particular person or group only; personal 私人的,個(gè)人的,私用的,私有的
2. not to be told to others; secret 秘密的,私下的
3. of, belonging to or run by an individual or a self-governed company rather than the State; not state-controlled 私營(yíng)的,私立的;非國(guó)家控制的
ownership
n. [U] state of being an owner; (right of) possession 物主身份;擁有(權(quán))
▲literally
ad. in a way that follows exactly the original; exactly 照字義,逐字地;真正地
urban
a. of, located in or living in a city or town 都市的,位于都市的,住在都市的
▲pave
vt. cover (a surface) with flat stones or bricks or tar 給(道路路面)鋪上石板或磚
mud
n. [U] soft wet earth 濕泥,泥
childhood
n. [C, U] condition or period of being a child 童年時(shí)期,孩提時(shí)代
bulb
n. 1. [C] 長(zhǎng)在土里的植物球莖(如百合、洋蔥、郁金香等植物)
2. [C] 電燈泡
container
n. [C] a box, bottle, etc. in which sth. is kept, transported, etc. 容器(箱、瓶等)
amateur
a. taking part in an activity for pleasure, not as a job, or (of an activity) done for pleasure, not as a job 業(yè)余的,非專業(yè)的
n. [C] a person who practices a sport or arts skill without receiving money for it (指不為賺錢而從事體育或藝術(shù)的)業(yè)余愛(ài)好者
gardener
n. [C] a person who works in a garden, either for pay or as a hobby (因愛(ài)好或掙錢) 在花園從事勞動(dòng)的人,園丁
pea
n. [C] 豌豆,豌豆屬植物
salad
n. 1. [U] 適于生吃的萵筍、萵苣或其他蔬菜
2. [C, U] 沙拉(涼拌菜),生菜
costly
a. costing much; expensive 昂貴的,代價(jià)高的
ditch
n. [C] a narrow water course dug at the edge of a field, road, etc., esp. to hold or carry off water(在田邊、路邊挖的,尤指用來(lái)儲(chǔ)水或排水的)溝,渠道
lorry
n. [C] 卡車
erect
vt. 1. build, set up; establish 建造,建立
2. set straight up; put up 豎立,直立
a. standing on end 豎直的,挺直的,直立的
mister
n. (略作Mr. , 全稱很少用于書面)先生
vice
a. acting instead of 代理的,副的
nineteen
num. 十九,十九個(gè)
conservation
n. [U] prevention of loss, waste, damage, destroying, etc. 保護(hù),保存, 節(jié)省
trail
n. 1. [C] a path, esp. through country 小道,崎嶇小路
2. [C] a mark or sign in the form of a long line left by sth. or sb. passing by 蹤跡,痕跡
v. 1. drag; be dragged along behind 拖,拉,下垂
2. fall behind (在比賽中)落后,失利
vt. follow the trail of; track 追蹤,尾隨
characterize (英characterise)
vt. 1. be common to (sb./sth.) 成為……的特征,以……為特征
2. describe... by stating its main qualities 描繪(人或物的)特征,歸納(人或物的)特征
housing
n. 1. [U] houses, flats, etc. 住宅或公寓,住宿(集合名詞)
2. [U] providing houses or flats for people 提供住宿,住房供給
recreation
n. [C, U] (means of) entertaining oneself after work; relaxation 休養(yǎng),娛樂(lè),消遣,精神放松
acre
n. 英畝(=4,840平方碼或約4,047平方米)
canal
n. [C] a long water way cut through land for boats or ships to travel along, or to carry water from one place to another 運(yùn)河,溝渠
excursion
n. [C] a short journey for pleasure 短途旅行,遠(yuǎn)足
comparable
a. 1. similar, that can be compared, equal to 相似的,同類的
2. meriting being compared 可比的,比得上的
strip
n. [C] a long narrow piece (of material, etc.) or area (of land, etc.) 狹長(zhǎng)的一塊(材料)或一片(土地)
vi. take off one's clothes 脫去衣服
vt. 1. take off (clothes, parts, etc.) from sb./sth. 剝?nèi)?,揭去,除去(衣服、遮蔽物、某部分?br />
2. take away (money, honors, etc.) from sb. 剝奪……的(錢財(cái)、榮譽(yù)等)
summit
n. 1. [C] highest point; top, esp. of a mountain 最高點(diǎn);(尤指山的)頂,絕頂
2. [C] a meeting between the heads of two or more governments, esp. of the world's most powerful countries 兩國(guó)或兩國(guó)以上(尤指世界上最強(qiáng)的國(guó)家)政府首腦的最高級(jí)會(huì)談
plot
n. 1. [C] a small marked or measured piece of land, esp. for a special purpose (尤指用于某特定目的)小塊土地, 小塊地皮
2. [C] (plan or sketch of the) events in the story of a play or novel (戲劇或小說(shuō)的故事)情節(jié)
3. [C] a secret plan made by several people to do sth. 秘密計(jì)劃,陰謀
v. make a secret plan (to do sth.); plan (sth.) with others 密謀;計(jì)劃
civilian
n. [C] a person not serving in the armed forces or the police force 平民
PHRASES AND EXPRESSIONS
open field
field which is not covered with trees, etc. 曠野
in fact
in truth; really 事實(shí)上,實(shí)際上
on top of
over or above 在……之上
work on
give one's attention to doing or trying to do 致力于
power line
【電】電力線,輸電線,電源線
coordinate one's efforts to
work together efficiently 齊心努力
clean up
make a place clean by removing the dirt 清掃,收拾,清理
up to
reach a certain number or amount 多達(dá),直到
for instance
as an example; for example 例如
wash away
(of water) remove or carry (sb./sth.) away to another place (指水)洗掉,沖走
lead into
(of a road, etc.) provide a way (for sb.) to enter (a place) 通往,通向
PROPER NAMES
Ernest Cook
歐內(nèi)斯特·庫(kù)克
Portland
波特蘭(美國(guó)緬因州西南部港市)
Maine
緬因州(美國(guó)州名)
Charles Jordan
查爾斯·喬丹
Pacific
太平洋
Phoenix
菲尼克斯(美國(guó)亞利桑那州首府)
Arizona
亞利桑那州(美國(guó)州名)
Baltimore
巴爾的摩(美國(guó)馬里蘭州中北部港市)
Flagstaff
弗來(lái)格斯達(dá)佛市
城市的綠色空間
孩子們上哪兒去玩? 幾年以前,任何開闊的地方、任何空地、任何樹叢都是孩子們玩耍的地方。 然而, 隨著一個(gè)個(gè)家庭離開了家庭農(nóng)場(chǎng)、小鎮(zhèn)和農(nóng)村,給孩子們玩耍的地方越來(lái)越少了。 城里孩子幾乎沒(méi)有選擇,可供他們選擇去玩耍的地方更少了。
事實(shí)上,搬到城里,所有人的生活都改變了很多。 城里一幢幢巨大的公寓大樓里的每個(gè)家都建造在另一個(gè)家的頂上。 住在層層相疊的房子里再也沒(méi)有那種私人空間和擁有的感覺(jué)了。
心理學(xué)家一直在研究人們?cè)陔x開鄉(xiāng)村搬到城市環(huán)境后所經(jīng)歷的變化。 他們的研究得出的一個(gè)清晰的結(jié)果是,為了更健康的心理,人們需要綠色的空間。 孩子們可以在鋪設(shè)平整的操場(chǎng)上玩耍。這是事實(shí)。 然而,他們并不能像生活在小城鎮(zhèn)里的孩子們那樣玩得開心。 沒(méi)有了青草、沒(méi)有了樹木、沒(méi)有了灌木,還有, 沒(méi)有了弄臟他們手腳和衣服的污物泥土,孩子們就失去了童年生活中的一個(gè)重要組成部分。 人類的靈魂似乎是需要貼近它的根基的。
大人們可以在窗口前花壇和大的容器里種上各種球莖狀的植物。 但是侍弄窗前花壇與做一個(gè)業(yè)余園丁、在后花園里種種豌豆、西紅柿和做色拉用的綠葉蔬菜可大不一樣。 現(xiàn)在人們已承認(rèn)并意識(shí)到缺少綠色空間是一個(gè)問(wèn)題。
城市規(guī)劃師們 - 那些設(shè)計(jì)居民區(qū)的人- 已經(jīng)開始努力尋找解決辦法了。 他們想建造更多的公園,但是城里地價(jià)十分昂貴。 所以他們就去尋找沒(méi)有什么人要的地。 河邊、輸電線下面、靠近溝渠和公路的地方都是沒(méi)人要的地。而且到處都有這類地塊。 為何不把這些無(wú)人使用的空地用作綠化地帶呢? 居民組織已經(jīng)在協(xié)助清除垃圾或廢物。 來(lái)自城里新建住宅工地的泥土被卡車運(yùn)到了這些地方。 這些泥土被卸在河邊,人們還砌起了堅(jiān)固的墻來(lái)圍住這些泥土。 已經(jīng)種上了樹和灌木,樹根會(huì)保護(hù)住這些泥土,綠油油的葉子使這個(gè)地區(qū)變得漂亮起來(lái)。
"住在城里或城市附近的人們很少有機(jī)會(huì)看到公園或開闊的空地,這正在成為一個(gè)問(wèn)題," 公有土地信托機(jī)構(gòu)的資深副總裁歐內(nèi)斯特·考克先生說(shuō)。 這個(gè)組織是在21多年前成立的, 其宗旨是為人們保護(hù)土地和公共資源。 在過(guò)去的19年里,該組織已在加拿大和美國(guó)完成了多達(dá)1千個(gè)的環(huán)境保護(hù)工程。
在緬因州的波特蘭市,那離海岸不遠(yuǎn)處的舊鐵路延線的土地已經(jīng)變成了一長(zhǎng)條綠化帶,正好處于以住宅開發(fā)為特征的區(qū)域和市中心以商業(yè)為特征的區(qū)域之間。 對(duì)波特蘭市的公園和娛樂(lè)部部長(zhǎng)查爾斯·喬丹先生來(lái)說(shuō),這僅僅是一個(gè)開頭。 喬丹計(jì)劃建立一所環(huán)境大學(xué)- 一個(gè)巨大的都市花園(面積為5千英畝)。 它將包括不同的環(huán)境,從運(yùn)河、濕地到森林。 喬丹的計(jì)劃還包括建造一批縱橫交錯(cuò)的曲徑小道,以便人們能利用它們到全市作短途旅行。 他還想建造一條從波特蘭市出發(fā),橫穿加拿大、美國(guó),一直延伸到太平洋的綠化地帶。 這一條綠化帶可以把遍布全大陸的各個(gè)國(guó)家連接起來(lái)。
其它城市也有類似計(jì)劃。 例如亞利桑那州的菲尼克斯,那被洪水沖決了的鹽河河床的兩岸正在變?yōu)橐粋€(gè)公園。 在巴爾的摩,曾被用來(lái)傾倒垃圾的一長(zhǎng)條土地正變成一條條自行車道和步行道。 這些小道將把十幾個(gè)居民區(qū)和市中心的商業(yè)區(qū)連接起來(lái)。 在有些城市,自行車道把所有地區(qū)都連接在一起了。 在亞利桑那州的弗來(lái)格斯達(dá)佛市,有1000英里長(zhǎng)的自行車道通向圣弗朗西斯科山峰,那是該州的最高峰。
在其它地區(qū),城市規(guī)劃師們已經(jīng)專門辟出了用于建自行車道和操場(chǎng)、公共和私人花園及散步和跑步小道的地方。 雖然代價(jià)高昂,卻換來(lái)了城市里不斷增多的綠地和居民們更為健康的生活環(huán)境。