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Rivers and lakes in European cities

Publication Created 20 Oct 2016 Published 25 Oct 2016
1 min read
Rivers and lakes, cover
Most European cities have at least one river or lake crossing their urban landscape. Urbanisation has come at a cost to rivers and lakes, as they have been heavily degraded to enable development, carry waste, supply drinking water and facilitate transport and industry.
Downloading: PDF document icon EEA-26-2016-Rivers and lakes_THAL16025ENN.pdf — PDF document, 1007 KB (1031973 bytes)
Publication Created 20 Oct 2016 Published 25 Oct 2016
1 min read
EEA Report No 26/2016
Most European cities have at least one river or lake crossing their urban landscape. Urbanisation has come at a cost to rivers and lakes, as they have been heavily degraded to enable development, carry waste, supply drinking water and facilitate transport and industry.

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: 978-92-9213-820-2 -821-9
: TH-AL-16-025-EN-C N

In recent decades, and after a gradual improvement in water quality due to wastewater treatment and reduced industrial activities, urban rivers and lakes have become increasingly important in the planning of urban ecology, green infrastructure, green areas and climate change adaptation in European cities.

The report describes water management issues related to rivers and lakes and outline the ways in which European cities develop strategies and measures to cope with the key challenges they currently face in relation to their inland surface waters. The report uses 17 case studies on urban river and lake restoration to illustrate important aspects on urban and water management. Finally, the report draws some important lessons learned from the case studies reviewed and frames some key contextual issues that are potentially relevant to different urban settings across Europe.

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