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PRODID:-//University of Birmingham//Events//EN
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20211007T155400Z
DTSTART:20211207T123000Z
DTEND:20211207T133000Z
SUMMARY:What Street Planting does for Air Quality
UID:www.birmingham.ac.uk/191383
DESCRIPTION:What street planting does (and doesn't) do for air quality
 Our cities are punctuated by a network of natural spaces and green corridors – from parks and gardens to woodlands, ponds, cycleways and rivers. Trees and shrubs can even be found in the busiest of streets. \n
 But there’s a popular misconception that street planting soaks up a significant amount of pollution. In fact, it mainly redistributes pollution by changing air currents. This can be beneficial, but it’s not just the quantity and position of planting that matters – the street's orientation, the shapes of buildings either side and their interactions with local wind conditions are critical for air quality too.\n
 In this lunchtime lecture by Dr James Levine, you’ll find out about new open-source software, developed by researchers at the University of Birmingham, that helps cities plant in pursuit of clean air and reduce citizens’ exposure to air pollution at the roadside.\n
 This event is presented as part of The Air We Breathe, a brand new public progamme at The Exchange bringing together cutting edge research from across the University of Birmingham. From a hydrogen train to a sci-fi forest, discover how the University is delivering clean air both here in Birmingham and around the world.\n
LOCATION:The Exchange: 3 Centenary Square Birmingham  B1 2DR
STATUS:CONFIRMED
TRANSP:OPAQUE
CLASS:PUBLIC
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