Across
- 5. View that landscape is shaped and constructed by human activity.
- 8. A process that integrates place-making, environmental responsibility, and social equity into creating meaningful urban spaces.
- 9. The depletion of natural resources such as forests due to human activities.
- 11. Urban issue arising from urban population demand that contributes to the loss of primary forests in Malaysia.
- 15. Describes urban design as involving multiple fields such as architecture, planning, engineering, and psychology.
- 18. Perspective where landscape is seen as a home for humans and other living things.
- 19. Has described urban design as a complex interdisciplinary field involving many disciplines.
- 20. One of the five (5) key components of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs.
Down
- 1. Phenomenon where urban areas experience higher temperatures than surrounding rural areas.
- 2. Has defined urban design as integrating place-making, environmental responsibility, and social equity.
- 3. Increase in Earth’s average temperature due to greenhouse gas emissions.
- 4. Professional involved in urban design practice.
- 6. Not only what we see physically, but also what we perceive mentally.
- 7. A condition where population exceeds available resources, highlighted in the lecture using a fictional character example.
- 10. Fundamental element of urban design as highlighted by Llewelyn Davies .
- 12. Long-term changes in temperature and weather patterns mainly caused by human activities.
- 13. A process of creating meaningful and attractive places for people in cities.
- 14. Approach that understands landscape as interconnected ecological and human processes.
- 16. Clearing of forests, often linked to environmental degradation and biodiversity loss.
- 17. Perspective that sees landscape as pristine and dominant over human influence.
