/ Landscape and Urban Planning 129 (2014) 1–11 3 government entities, farmer and community organizations, NGOs, donors, eChina Academy of Urban Planning and Design Shanghai Branch, Shanghai 200335, China fDepartment of Psychology, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China gCollege of Geography and Environment, Jiangxi Normal University, Nanchang 330200, China ARTICLE INFO Keywords: Urban perception Place semantics Street-level imagery Deep learning Mockrin et al. / Landscape and Urban Planning 125 (2014) 234–244 density (Jerrett et al., 2009), and social conditions, such as poverty, unemployment, and crime—to assess how proximity to parks and recreational resources affects the development of childhood obe-sity. Supports open access. / Landscape and Urban Planning 138 (2015) 41–50 example, Leather, Pyrgas, Beale and Lawrence (1998) and Kaplan (2001) found that window views of nature from the office and / Landscape and Urban Planning 160 (2017) 69–78 The only way to increase the generalizability of this effort, and increase the likelihood of a good match, is to expand the sample Hence, firstly, urban design concept and its bond with landscape architecture will be discussed. / Landscape and Urban Planning 161 (2017) 72–79 77 Table 2 Adjusted-difference-in-differences effects of the impact of Community Greenspace planted trees on crime per block face, per year, in New Haven, CT, 1996–2007. Landscape planning brings landscape architecture, urban and regional planning, landscape and ecological engineering, and other practice-oriented fields to bear in processes for identifying problems and analyzing, synthesizing, and evaluating desirable alternatives for landscape change. 2012 – 14). J.R. Wolch et al. The languages are American and British English, Spanish (with many Latin-American equivalents), French, and German. 1. Landscape and Urban Planning is an international journal aimed at advancing conceptual, scientific, and applied understandings of landscape in order to promote sustainable solutions for landscape change.Landscapes are visible and integrative social-ecological systems with variable spatial and temporal dimensions. eChina Academy of Urban Planning and Design Shanghai Branch, Shanghai 200335, China fDepartment of Psychology, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China gCollege of Geography and Environment, Jiangxi Normal University, Nanchang 330200, China ARTICLE INFO Keywords: Urban perception Place semantics Street-level imagery Deep learning / Landscape and Urban Planning 157 (2017) 598–607 599 mobility with retirement (Gosnell & Abrams, 2011). Kuang et al. / Landscape and Urban Planning 134 (2015) 127–138 129 Fig. Sustainable Urban Planning Tipping the Balance Robert Riddell. / Landscape and Urban Planning 101 (2011) 310–320 strated should also be applicable in a variety of other landscape planning applications … a focus in urban landscape planning and urban design on the creation of high-quality public spaces, or place-making. Urban landscape elements, whether public or private property, are parts of the city s form and texture.