Ten years on from the signing of the European Landscape Convention in Florence, the topic of the environmental quality of daily life is recognized as a precondition for development and is present on the agendas at all levels of government, from the sphere of planning in Europe right down to the desks at local government level. The broadening of the concept of "landscape" to include the territory in its entirety on which the relationship between man and nature is developed has brought innovation to how the project is carried out. Traditional urban planning has, over time, given way to an approach which calls for performance requirements which force the built-up environment to respond to community requirements with logic and where culture hol...