In addition, planners aiming for ‘just green enough’ solutions can promote green space interventions that are small-scale and in scattered sites, rather than grander civic green space projects that geographically concentrate resources and kick-start rounds of gentrification. Schauman and Salisbury(1998),for example,trace the history of urban reuse from focusing on very large,complex,and extremely degraded sites,such as abandoned mines or oil refineries, to its present focus on weaving natural function into many small,under utilized sites. Refocusing on small-scale interventions, they argue, has the benefit of more evenly distributing access to nature for urban residents rather than creating a focal point for property development strategies.