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Stay up-to-date with UEI during the spring and summer months as we seek to create healthy urban ecosystems by checking the events calendar, reading the blog, and signing up for email updates.

Sustainable Cities Division

The health of the physical environmental in our cities is closely connected to the physical, social, and mental well-being of urban residents. Through the Sustainable Cities Division's programs, UEI and community-based partners work together to strengthen our urban communities by transforming vacant lots into community green spaces, increasing urban tree canopy cover and creating urban watershed restoration plans. Follow these links or scroll down for an introduction to our program areas:




City Roots

CityRoots is an innovative, community-driven approach to urban sustainability that provides residents of Greater Boston's diverse neighborhoods the opportunity to address the environmental issues facing their communities through hands-on ecological restoration projects. Through this process, CityRoots takes advantage of the fact that making the neighborhood greener is a prime community-building opportunity for Boston’s urban residents.



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Neighborhood Sustainability Projects

In partnership with Trust for Public Land, UEI is building a coalition of NGO's, community-based groups and government agency staff to create a collaborative, city-wide process for community transformation of vacant lots into parks and open spaces. The vision for this effort is to create a collaborative, resident-informed process for determining the future of the City's remaining vacant land.



Learn More About Greater Boston's Urban Forest Coalition

Learn More About Grow Boston Greener


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Urban Tree Canopy

Trees are vital to the health of a neighborhood and its community members. Not only do trees lower temperatures by providing shade, they have also proven to cut the rates of asthma and other repertory diseases by removing air pollutants. They sequester carbon, and have a dramatic effect on absorbing storm water runoff. Urban Forests are also known to dramatically reduce the Urban Heat Island effect. On a household level, one large shade tree can reduce air conditioning cost by 30% and reduce heating cost by 10-25% by blocking wind. Trees have also shown to have dramatic effects on the neighborhoods they are planted in through their capacity to help foster a sense of community by creating attractive and engaging meeting places. Community based tree planting projects can engage residents and promote further community improvement. The Greater Boston Urban Forest Inventory (GBUFI) is the first GIS cataloging of every street trees and canopy cover in Boston. Spearheaded by UEI and overseen by Boston's Urban Forest Coalition Greater Boston Urban Forest Inventory uses remote sensing data combined with on-the-ground street tree surveys to provide a complete and detailed understanding of the condition and location of Boston's urban forest.



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