On this page you will find resources produced by the New Zealand Centre for Sustainable Cities and other organisations we support, including non-peer reviewed publications such as our books, submissions and blogs. Other useful material to which we have contributed is also listed here.

 

— Latest Resources

  • Placemaking for wellbeing in public and community housing
    Wellbeing, Space and Society,
  • Improving Buildings, Cutting Carbon.
    Wellington, New Zealand: Steele Roberts, Aotearoa
  • Noy, S. Devlin, M.
    Housing, Health and the Well-being of Children.
    Ministry of Social Development. Wellington, New Zealand
  • Gyde, E. Pedersen Zari, M. Perry, M.
    Current and future green space supply and demand in central Wellington City, New Zealand.
  • Ürge-Vorsatz, D.
    1.5°C of Global Warming: Can We Still Get There? Insights from the Urban Development Sector.
    In L. Grant, H. Viggers & P. Howden-Chapman (Eds.), Improving Buildings, Cutting Carbon.
    Wellington, New Zealand: Steele Roberts, Aotearoa
  • Dodge, N.
    Investment for sustainable transport: transport investment and carbon emissions in four Anglophone countries.
    NZ Centre for Sustainable Cities Policy Paper
    November 2017
    Download document
  • Dodge, N.
    Framing mobility investment: a review of the inclusion of environmental and social costs in transport appraisal frameworks in four Anglophone countries.
    NZ Centre for Sustainable Cities Policy Paper
    November 2017
  • Sobiecki,L.
    Submission to Wellington City Council on car sharing facilitation.
    NZ Centre for Sustainable Cities
  • Why New Zealand transport policy needs to encourage walking and cycling.
    In L Early & P Howden-Chapman (Eds.), Cities in New Zealand: Preferences, patterns and possibilities.
    (pp.107-114). Wellington, New Zealand: Steele Roberts Aotearoa.
  • The value of experience: Including young people in energy poverty research.
    In N. Simcock, H. Thomson, S. Petrova & S. Bouzarovski (Eds.), Energy poverty and vulnerability: A global perspective.
    (pp 188-201). Abingdon, UK: Routledge.