Land evaluation
After the identification and delineation of land on
the basis of comparable biophysical characteristics into natural land
units, land evaluation comprises successively:
-
assessment of the inherent land qualities of the identified
natural land units, their constraints and opportunities,
-
identification and characterization of present forms of land cover
and land use,
-
identification of prospective land utilization types or production
systems,
-
identification of the bio-physical and socio-economic requirements
of the identified land utilization types,
-
matching of the inherent land requirements of the utilization
types under consideration,
-
the formulation of recommended land uses - or non-uses
- in order
of decreasing appropriateness, per land unit.
The last step (formulation of recommended land uses) is often the
least neutral because it requires a comparison of economically
quantifiable land values such as the agricultural production potential,
or the effects of infrastructural improvements, against largely non-tangible or non quantifiable values such as biodiversity or heritage
characteristics of the land.
next
chapter: zoning
last chapter:
multiple functions of land
back
to: land use planning
top