relation: https://frw.studenttheses.ub.rug.nl/338/ title: The grass is always greener in the garden next door An exploration of the potential and necessities for gardens in urban climate-resilience planning creator: Roest, A.H. description: This research focusses on exploring the effects, causes and policy challenges linked to soil-sealing in private properties. This research uses a combination of Remote Sensing, Surveys, Statistics and Policy Review to measure the extent of Soil-sealing and its effects on the urban environment. The main findings of this research is that a large part of urban potential green space is located in gardens yet the largest share of this space is soil-sealed, which shifts sewage capacities by around 4 percent in the urban environment. Furthermore, gardens are subject to a large factors of determinants including physical (size), ownership (rent/owned), socio-economic (wealth, time), policy (governance strategies) and other determinants that together impact the extent to which citizens are able and willing to contribute to urban climate-resilience. date: 2018 type: Thesis type: NonPeerReviewed format: text language: en identifier: https://frw.studenttheses.ub.rug.nl/338/1/AllardRoest_s2145758_ThesisFinal.pdf identifier: Roest, A.H. (2018) The grass is always greener in the garden next door An exploration of the potential and necessities for gardens in urban climate-resilience planning. Master thesis.