Is this even a question? I thought real estate agents had calculated the added value of green space decades ago..Concrete numbers, that are quite high, and quite realistic, as far as I know….And then in the eighties, New York went even farther, with the theory that green space that is built to high-end standards will be treated better,so investment in public space should not be built cheap, because it does not pay off, over time – people will vandalize it more..
Does any one doubt that green space adds value? Aren’t the numbers quite nailed down? This went along with the tree replacement numbers, which are quite high, in environmental calculations,and fairly well detailed.