YIMBY Melbourne recommends over the next ten years:
Socio-economic status is strongly correlated with higher public tree canopy. Detached house prices and unit prices are higher in areas with street tree canopy.
Melbourne's "leafy" east isn't just describing backyards; it's describing the public realm as well. Meanwhile, the west and the poorer areas are incredibly underserved in terms of trees in both the private and public realms.
This leaves poorer people with less amenity and greater exposure to the urban heat island effect.
Street trees are an equity issue, and one that will require Victorian Government investment to remedy.
It is tempting to think of trees as set-and-forget infrastructure—but they require long term maintenance to flourish.
YIMBY Melbourne recommends investing the full amount upfront in a street tree capital fund to ensure that our city's future street tree canopy is robust, successful, and vibrant.
As we build Melbourne's Missing Middle, we have an opportunity to invest in the city's streets and enable more Melburnians to benefit from our urban forest.
YIMBY Melbourne's Missing Middle Street Trees report enables viewers to compare street, public, and residential tree coverage across all of inner-middle Melbourne.
Top performers (within 15km of CBD): Eaglemont, Canterbury, Hampton, Ivanhoe East, Surrey Hills
Bottom performers (within 15km of CBD): South Wharf, West Melbourne, Docklands, Brooklyn, Sunshine West
Check yours: https://trees.yimby.melbourne/suburbs
"When you compare the world's most liveable cities, Melbourne sits in the middle of the pack when it comes to tree canopy coverage. We think Melbourne deserves to be better than mediocre."
"Street trees are one of the fundamental building blocks of good neighbourhoods, and should not just be reserved for the wealthy and the well-off. Street trees should be for everyone."
"Investing in street trees represents an easy win for the State Government. Street trees are one of the few universally beloved things in this world, and a long-term investment now would be a show of good faith in the sustainable future of our city."