• Wissenschaftliche Publikationen

Veröffentlichungen der HSWT

Die chronologische Liste zeigt aktuelle Veröffentlichungen aus dem Forschungsbetrieb der Hochschule Weihenstephan-Triesdorf. Zuständig ist das Zentrum für Forschung und Wissenstransfer (ZFW).

8 Ergebnisse

  • Prof. Dr. Olaf Gerhard Schroth, C. Zhang

    Augmented Landform – An Educational Augmented Reality Tool for Landscape Architecture Students (2014) Herausgeber: E. B. Christophe Girot, Adrienne Grêt-Regamey, Ulrike Wissen Hayek (Ed.), Peer Reviewed Proceedings of Digital Landscape Architecture 2014 at ETH Zurich. Wichmann Verlag: Offenbach & Berlin , S. 383–390.

  • S. Burch, Stephen R. J. Sheppard, Ellen Pond, Prof. Dr. Olaf Gerhard Schroth

    Climate change visioning: Effective processes for advancing the policy and practice of local adaptation (2013) Herausgeber: Moser, S. and Boykoff, M. (eds.). Successful Adaptation to Climate Change: Linking science and policy in a rapidly changing world. London: Routledge 2013 , S. 270-286.

  • S. Cohen, M. Laurie, I. Liepa, T. Murdock, C. Pearce, Ellen Pond, Prof. Dr. Olaf Gerhard Schroth, et. al.

    Shared learning on adapting to climate change in south-east British Columbia, Canada (2013) Herausgeber: Palutikof, J., Boulter, S.L., Ash, A.J., Smith, M.S., Parry, M., Waschka, M., Guitart, D. (eds.) Climate Adaptation Futures. 1st ed. Gold Coast, Australia: John Wiley & Sons , S. 177-189.

  • Prof. Dr. Olaf Gerhard Schroth

    Energielandschaften. Räumliche Modellierung von Energiepotenzialen auf regionaler Eben (2013) Akademie für Raumforschung und Landesplanung ARL Kongress 2013, Hamburg, Germany .

  • Prof. Dr. Olaf Gerhard Schroth

    Best Practices – Designs Boosting Urban Climate Change (2013) Invited talk at the European Climate Change Adaptation Conference (ECCA) – Integrating Climate into Action, Hamburg, Germany 2013 .

  • Prof. Dr. Olaf Gerhard Schroth, Ellen Pond, R. Tooke, D. Flanders, Stephen R. J. Sheppard

    Spatial Modeling for Community Renewable Energy Planning: Case Studies in British Columbia, Canada (2012) Herausgeber: Stremke, S. and van den Dobbelsteen, A. (eds.) Sustainable Energy Landscapes: Designing, Planning, and Development. Netherlands: Taylor & Francis , S. 311–334.

  • Prof. Dr. Olaf Gerhard Schroth, Ellen Pond, Cam Campbell, Petr Cizek, Stephen Bohus, Stephen R. J. Sheppard

    • Berechtigungen:  Open Access
    • Berechtigungen:  Peer Reviewed

    Tool or Toy? Virtual Globes in Landscape Planning (2011) Future Internet 3 (4), S. 204-227. DOI: 10.3390/fi3040204

    Virtual globes, i.e., geobrowsers that integrate multi-scale and temporal data from various sources and are based on a globe metaphor, have developed into serious tools that practitioners and various stakeholders in landscape and community planning have started using. Although these tools originate from Geographic Information Systems (GIS), they have become a different, potentially interactive and public tool set, with their own specific limitations and new opportunities. Expectations regarding their utility as planning and community engagement tools are high, but are tempered by both technical limitations and ethical issues [1,2]. Two grassroots campaigns and a collaborative visioning process, the Kimberley Climate Adaptation Project case study (British Columbia), illustrate and broaden our understanding of the potential benefits and limitations associated with the use of virtual globes in participatory planning initiatives. Based on observations, questionnaires and in-depth interviews with stakeholders and community members using an interactive 3D model of regional climate change vulnerabilities, potential impacts, and possible adaptation and mitigation scenarios in Kimberley, the benefits and limitations of virtual globes as a tool for participatory landscape planning are discussed. The findings suggest that virtual globes can facilitate access to geospatial information, raise awareness, and provide a more representative virtual landscape than static visualizations. However,OPEN ACCESSFuture Internet 2011, 3 205landscape is not equally representative at all scales, and not all types of users seem to benefit equally from the tool. The risks of misinterpretation can be managed by integrating the application and interpretation of virtual globes into face-to-face planning processes.
  • Prof. Dr. Olaf Gerhard Schroth, Ellen Pond, Stephen R. J. Sheppard

    Google Earth as Tool in Planning Sustainable Communities (Extended Abstract) (2011) CHI 2011, Vancouver, May 7-12, 2011 .

Betreuung der Publikationsseiten

Zentrum für Forschung und Wissenstransfer - Lageplan in Weihenstephan an der HSWT

Kontakt

Hochschule Weihenstephan-Triesdorf
Zentrum für Forschung und Wissenstransfer
Gebäude H21
Am Staudengarten 9
85354 Freising

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