The ‘just green enough’ strategy depends on the willingness of planners and local stakeholders to design green space projects that are explicitly shaped by community concerns,needs,and desires rather than either conventional urban design formulae or ecological restoration approaches. Replacing these market-driven or ecological approaches with ‘just green enough’ strategies is especially challenging,typically requiring community activism.Those efforts,however,can help protect lower income neighborhoods. For instance,Newman(2011)found that local non-profits in Toronto encouraged planners to move away from re-wilding approaches to restoration, in favor of emphasizing landscapes that can also serve as nodes for urban agriculture and community garden spaces. In this way,restoration projects are more connected to local concerns about food security,job creation,and human health.