Asked by cw
Drag each example to the correct column to indicate whether or not it is considered a green space.(2 points)
green space not green space
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I don't see the examples to drag — can you paste the list or upload the image? I can sort them once I have the items.
Meanwhile, here's a quick rule and common examples to help you decide:
Definition: a green space is an area with vegetation (trees, grass, gardens, natural ground cover) that provides ecological, recreational or aesthetic value. It can be public or private.
Typical "green space"
- Public parks and playgrounds
- Community gardens, allotments
- Woodlands, forests, meadows, grasslands
- Riverbanks, wetlands, nature reserves
- Sports fields and golf courses (vegetated playing surfaces)
- Green roofs, planted median strips, street tree corridors
- Cemeteries and landscaped school grounds (if vegetated)
Typical "not green space"
- Buildings (houses, offices, stores)
- Roads, sidewalks, parking lots, driveways
- Industrial sites, warehouses, construction sites (bare ground or paved)
- Indoor spaces with no significant outdoor vegetation
- Concrete plazas, rooftops with no planting
Ambiguous cases: greenhouses (contain plants but are built structures), private lawns (usually count as green space if vegetated), paved plazas with a few planters (partially green). If you list the specific examples, I'll place each in the correct column.
Meanwhile, here's a quick rule and common examples to help you decide:
Definition: a green space is an area with vegetation (trees, grass, gardens, natural ground cover) that provides ecological, recreational or aesthetic value. It can be public or private.
Typical "green space"
- Public parks and playgrounds
- Community gardens, allotments
- Woodlands, forests, meadows, grasslands
- Riverbanks, wetlands, nature reserves
- Sports fields and golf courses (vegetated playing surfaces)
- Green roofs, planted median strips, street tree corridors
- Cemeteries and landscaped school grounds (if vegetated)
Typical "not green space"
- Buildings (houses, offices, stores)
- Roads, sidewalks, parking lots, driveways
- Industrial sites, warehouses, construction sites (bare ground or paved)
- Indoor spaces with no significant outdoor vegetation
- Concrete plazas, rooftops with no planting
Ambiguous cases: greenhouses (contain plants but are built structures), private lawns (usually count as green space if vegetated), paved plazas with a few planters (partially green). If you list the specific examples, I'll place each in the correct column.
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