51 Objectifying Building with Nature strategies Towards scale-resolving policies Mindert de Vries1,2,5, Mark van Koningsveld3,4,5, Stefan Aarninkhof4,5, & Huib de Vriend4,5 1. Deltares 2. Van Hall Larenstein University of Applied Sciences 3. Van Oord Dredging and Marine Contractors B.V. 4. Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences 5. EcoShape DOI 10.47982/rius.7.128 R IU S 7: B U ILD IN G W ITH N A TU R E P ER SP EC TIV ES 52 Abstract By definition, Building with Nature solutions utilise services provided by the natural system and/or provide new opportunities to that system. As a consequence, such solutions are sensitive to the status of, and interact with the surrounding system. A thorough understanding of the ambient natural system is therefore necessary to meet the required specifications and to realise the potential interactions with that system. In order to be adopted beyond the pilot scale, the potential impact of multiple BwN solutions on the natural and societal systems of a region need to be established. This requires a ‘reality check’ of the effectiveness of multiple, regional-scale applications in terms of social and environmental costs and benefits. Reality checking will help establish the upscaling potential of a certain BwN measure when addressing a larger-scale issue. Conversely, it might reveal to what extent specific smaller- scale measures are suitable in light of larger regional-scale issues. This paper presents a stepwise method to approach a reality check on BwN solutions, based on the Frame of Reference method described in a companion paper (de Vries et al., 2021), and illustrates its use by two example cases. The examples show that a successful pilot project is not always a guarantee of wider applicability and that a broader application may involve dilemmas concerning environment, policy and legislation. KEYWORDS Building with Nature, ecosystem services, frame of reference, objectification, design, solutions A S Y S T EM A T IC O B JEC T IF Y IN G B U ILD IN G W IT H N A T U R E S T R A T EG IES: TO W A R D S SC A LE-R ESO LV IN G P O LIC IES 53 1. Introduction Building with Nature (BwN) solutions utilise services provided by the natural system and/or provide new opportunities to that system (De Vriend and Van Koningsveld, 2012). In order for BwN-solutions to be effective, the functioning of the system in which they are embedded needs to be well un- derstood. The BwN philosophy is applicable to engineering infrastructure de- velopment in a variety of surface water systems (De Vriend et al., 2015, Bridg- es et al., 2018, Laboyrie et al., 2018), but also at different scale levels, from a single project to regional-scale strategies. This also means that the system functioning at this larger scale needs to be considered and understood. Where BwN solutions are supposed to fit into such a larger-scale strate- gy, objective evaluation beyond isolated pilot implementations is required to demonstrate the larger-scale functionality of multiple smaller-scale inter- ventions. On the other hand, it is important to establish which smaller-scale engineering solutions are suitable for application at the larger scale (consid- ering the desired overall effect at the system scale, which local solutions are likely to be effective?). Important evaluation criteria are the societal and en- vironmental costs and benefits. The Frame of Reference (FoR) method described in a companion paper (De Vries et al., 2021) provides an explicit framework to streamline the design of water infrastructure and other processes involving complex decision mak- ing. It starts from a clear definition of strategic and operational objectives. This method can be equally applied to the development phases of individual projects and to multiple projects at the regional scale. De Vries et al. (2021) demonstrate the applicability of this method in a project context. Application of the FoR method across different scales provides an important reality check for the viability of individual BwN solutions and the overall strategy to which they contribute. In that sense, such an assessment can become a key enabler for the wider acceptance of BwN-based strategies. This scale resolving scope, however, has yet to receive the same level of attention as the project/pilot scope. The objective of this paper is to fill this gap by applying the FoR-meth- od in a step by step process to two cases with different types of measures in different environmental settings, in order to reality-check the benefit of upscaling the implementation of BwN at a regional-scale. Subsequently, we consider a broader spectrum of BwN solutions and see what larger-scale stra- tegic objectives they aim to meet. R IU S 7: B U ILD IN G W ITH N A TU R E P ER SP EC TIV ES 54 2. Reality-checking regional-scale BwN solutions The “Frame of Reference” approach The Frame of Reference (FoR) approach (Van Koningsveld, 2003; Van Koningsveld et al., 2003; Van Koningsveld and Mulder, 2004) was developed to match specialist knowledge with end user needs by making the essential components of a decision problem explicit. In that way, the FoR approach streamlines discussions between different actors, following an interactive process to achieve ongoing refinement. Fundamental to this approach is the definition of clear objectives at strategic and operational levels, reflecting key elements of the policy strategy. For the operational phase, indicators are de- fined to verify whether or not the objectives are met. The operational phase requires specification of the following elements: - the Quantitative State Concept (QSC), - a benchmarking procedure, - an intervention procedure, and - an evaluation procedure. These elements interact as indicated in Figure 1. Figure 1. The ‘basic Frame of Reference template’ (modified from: Marchand, 2011) Steps for scale resolving application of the FoR method When applying the FoR method in a scale resolving management ap- proach, recurring procedural steps are: 1. Define the regional-scale strategic and operational objectives and break down the realisation strategy into a number of logical elements (pro- jects). A S Y S T EM A T IC O B JEC T IF Y IN G B U ILD IN G W IT H N A T U R E S T R A T EG IES: TO W A R D S SC A LE-R ESO LV IN G P O LIC IES 55 2. Specify strategic and operational objectives for each project individually. 3. Quantify the performance of each project individually in light of these objectives. 4. Determine to what extent each project meets its individual objectives. 5. Check if the combination of projects (the scheme) achieves the overar- ching strategic and operational objective(s), using plausible quantitative estimates of the effects. 6. Check how the designed scheme fits into the regional governance con- text. Each individual project can be designed as a BwN intervention. The six- step objectification process proposed in the companion paper by De Vries et al (2021) can be used for that purpose. We will follow these steps in the follow- ing evaluation of the two example projects. Sandy strategies for coastline maintenance (coastal, soft, abiotic) Step 1: Large-scale strategic and operational objectives, and breakdown of the realisation scheme The sandy shores of the North Sea Coast in the Netherlands have long been eroding as a result of the combined effects of sea level rise, reduced supply of river sediment and ongoing land subsidence. After finalisation of the Delta works, attention to countering this ongoing erosion has increased. This materialised into a policy to preserve functions and values in the coastal zone (strategic objective). An extensive study of coastal processes at various time and space scales (Stive et al., 1990) revealed that maintaining the coast- line requires adding an amount of sand of the order of 10 million m3 per year. Therefore, the Netherlands government established a sediment management policy aimed at keeping the coastline at its 1990 position, the Basal Coastline (BKL) (operational objective; see Van Koningsveld and Mulder, 2004). To that end, a volumetric coastline definition was laid down in law. Note that this maintenance policy is different from interventions en- suing from the regular coastal safety assessments. The latter focus on dune erosion during a mega-storm event, rather than on the sand volume in the coastal profile. The maintenance policy is presently implemented by means of beach or shoreface nourishments along the Dutch coast wherever the coastline re- cedes beyond the BKL. The design lifetime of these nourishments is generally some 5 years. Evaluation of this policy led to the conclusion that this approach meets the objectives as far as the upper shoreface is concerned, but that not enough sediment reaches the lower shoreface to balance erosion there. This led to a second strategic objective: to maintain the lower shoreface (the coastal foundation; see Mulder et al., 2007). R IU S 7: B U ILD IN G W ITH N A TU R E P ER SP EC TIV ES 56 Step 2: Strategic and operational objectives per nourishment project The operational objective of each maintenance nourishment is to locally prevent structural coastal erosion. The volume of an individual nourishment was typically 1-5 million m3, which was sufficient to achieve the operational objective for a period of 3-5 years. The Delta Committee (2008), however, an- ticipated a significant increase in nourishment volumes, from the present 10 million m3/year to 40 - 85 million m3/year, depending on the rate of sea lev- el rise. This might necessitate larger nourishments and/or new nourishment methods. In line with the BwN-philosophy, the idea emerged to concentrate the regular nourishments in space and time, relying on natural processes (currents, waves) to distribute the sediment over the wider coastal system. As compared with smaller-scale nourishments repeated every 3 to 5 years, utilising this ecosystem service was expected to achieve the operational ob- jective in a more sustainable manner. It was expected to reduce the ecological and CO2 footprint of the nourishment policy while creating opportunities for recreation and nature development, thus providing ecosystem services and addressing additional operational objectives. Figure 2. The Sand Motor; left: after placement in 2011; right: in 2017. (source: Rijkswaterstaat Beeldbank, https://beeldbank.rws.nl/; photos Joop van Houdt) Step 3: Quantification of Project performance In 2011 an experimental 21.5 million m3 mega-nourishment project called the Sand Motor was implemented in front of the Delfland coast (Stive et al., 2013, Figure 2). The design process ultimately resulted in a hook-shaped pen- insula that would provide space for juvenile dune formation and resting areas for birds and seals, with a shallow lagoon that would provide habitat to juve- nile fish and other species. Part of the sand would be transported onshore by wind, promoting the dune formation along the beach. The hook-shape was furthermore assumed to be attractive for beach recreation. In anticipation of coastal science and management interest, an extensive monitoring program was carried out including deployment of a video observation tower on the beach. Based on pre-project sediment balance and numerical model studies, the project was framed as being sufficient for 20 years of coastal maintenance. A S Y S T EM A T IC O B JEC T IF Y IN G B U ILD IN G W IT H N A T U R E S T R A T EG IES: TO W A R D S SC A LE-R ESO LV IN G P O LIC IES 57 The overarching objective of the Sand Engine experiment was to test whether the anticipated benefits of such a concentrated mega-nourishment, viz. auto-distribution by natural processes, the development of habitats and realization of recreation potential, would indeed materialise. This was estab- lished via monitoring programs, measuring campaigns and multidisciplinary research programs (see Luijendijk and Van Oudenhove, 2019). Step 4: Objectives met? Although the objectives of the Sand Motor were not formulated sharply enough to allow for quantitative evaluation (e.g. De Weerdt, 2015), Luijendijk and Van Oudenhove (2019) conclude from the results of these efforts that the effects of the Sand Motor are partly beyond expectation (recreation, biodiver- sity) and partly less so (ecosystem recovery, aeolian transport into the dune area, juvenile dune formation on top of the nourishment). Also, the expec- tation that in the coastal cell between Hook of Holland and Scheveningen no further nourishments would be needed for 20 years turned out to be unrealis- tic: nature takes time to distribute the sand alongshore and, in the meantime, areas further away from the Sand Motor may need intermediate nourishing in the years to come. Yet, the number of nourishments in this coastal cell would be significantly less without the Sand Motor, which means less costs (mob/ demob), less energy expenditure and less CO2-emissions. Also, because the sand is deposited in a much thicker layer, the environmental impact of the Sand Motor, in terms of disturbed seabed / benthic organisms, is much small- er as the nourishment footprint scales inversely proportional to its height. Table 1 illustrates this observation, showing that the footprint of the Sand Motor is approximately similar to the footprint of a regular nourishment area. As the regular nourishment has to be repeated another 8 times to realise the same total sand volume, its total impact becomes much larger – especially as the recovery time of benthic communities in the nearshore (~4-6 years) aligns with the return frequency of classic nourishment schemes. volume (106 m3) volume (m3/m) longshore length (m) cross-shore width (m) mean height (m) footprint (106 m2) Average regular nourishment 2,4 600 4000 ~300 ~2.0 1,2 Sand Motor 21,5 10.750 2000 ~650 ~16,5 1,3 Table 1. Order-of-magnitude estimates of the footprint area of a mega-nourishment and an equivalent volume of regular shoreface nourishments (regular nourishments data from Rijkswaterstaat, Kustlijnkaarten 2019, period 2009-2018 All in all, the operational objective of maintaining enough sand in the coastal profile is met over a gradually expanding stretch of coast, as well as the additional operational objective of nature-driven distribution alongshore. R IU S 7: B U ILD IN G W ITH N A TU R E P ER SP EC TIV ES 58 Little of the nourished sediment is lost from the coastal system, but not all of it is found back on the upper shoreface. This suggests that also the lower shoreface (the foundation) benefits. In that sense, the project has proven to be successful as an experiment and a showcase. The Sand Motor experiment has also shown that a slightly different de- sign may help to materialise the envisaged additional benefits (Luijendijk and Van Oudenhove, 2019): - the rate of ecosystem recovery strongly depends on the sediment composi- tion; if it is the same as before the nourishment, recovery is rather fast; in case of a different composition it takes much longer; - aeolian transport into the dune area, as well as juvenile dune formation on top of the nourishment, also depends on the composition of the nourished material; shells, clay and coarse sediment may cause armouring of the top layer if not frequently reworked by wave action; - a shallower lagoon would prevent anoxia of the deeper layers, as has been the case after some time in the lagoon of the Sand Motor; the lagoon would also fill up more rapidly and, with its fertile mud deposits, it would sooner become a green dune area; - the lake at the Sand Motor tends to trap wind-blown sediment, at the ex- pense of juvenile dune formation in front of the existing dunes; - the environmental benefits of the hook-shape can be doubted, if it were only because it rapidly evolves to the more natural shape of a gaussian hump and therefore exhibits a very dynamic low biodiverse environment. Finally, expectations among stakeholders and the public should be man- aged by careful framing of this type of high-exposure projects. Step 5: Overarching objectives met? Given this experience, are mega-nourishments the best method to main- tain the North Sea coast if 40-85 million m3 of sand is needed per year (Delta Committee, 2008)? In an analysis, ‘before the fact’, Mulder et al (2007) con- clude on the basis of a numerical model study looking 150 years ahead that: - repeated nourishments high on the profile (i.e. the beach or the upper shoreface) are effective in keeping the coastline in place (operational ob- jective), but insufficiently compensate coastal retreat at deeper water; the resulting steepening of the profile leads to an increasing ‘loss’ of sediment to deeper water; from the perspective of the second strategic objective, however, this ‘loss’ is rather a gain, though by itself insufficient to main- tain the coastal foundation; - maintaining the coastal foundation along with sea level rise ultimately A S Y S T EM A T IC O B JEC T IF Y IN G B U ILD IN G W IT H N A T U R E S T R A T EG IES: TO W A R D S SC A LE-R ESO LV IN G P O LIC IES 59 reduces coastline retreat; hence a better maintained coastal foundation requires less coastline maintenance in the long run; It can be questioned though whether the reduction of coastline maintenance volumes compen- sates for the extra sand needed to maintain the coastal foundation. The lat- ter also depends on the exact formulation of the objectives and the defini- tion of the coastal foundation. - both the coastline and the coastal foundation profit locally - and over a gradually increasing reach - from concentrated nourishments. Apart from these qualitative conclusions, Table 1 shows that 40 million m3 per year would mean roughly 16-17 regular nourishments per year, with a total footprint area of 20  106 m2 and a disturbed coastal length of approx- imately 67 km. If the whole volume would be realised with mega-nourish- ments of the size of the Sand Motor, only 2 would be needed per year, with a total footprint area of 2,6  106 m2 and only 4 km of initially disturbed length. Although a comparison of these numbers is probably not fair, they do illus- trate the need to prepare for a different nourishment practice utilising larger nourishments. To what extent the benefit/cost ratio of mega-nourishments is higher than that of smaller-scale traditional nourishments depends on the perspec- tive taken. From the point of view of the short-term operational objective of keeping the coastline in place, traditional nourishments may be more cost-ef- fective (immediate return on investment in terms of sand on the coast). Yet, the economy of scale works in favour of large nourishments. Mobilisation and demobilisation costs are less, as are operational costs, as larger trailing suc- tion hopper dredges can be employed, and less sediment has to be pumped onshore. Van der Bilt (2019) showed for a regular nourishment project that approximately 60% of the total CO2-emissions were associated with pumped unloading. Avoiding this significantly reduces the energy expenditure and the CO2-footprint. Note that changing the preferred nourishment strategy (two 20-million m3 nourishments per year, instead of twenty 2-million m3 nour- ishments) demands a thorough revision of the present-day planning strategy for coastline maintenance. When taking a strategic, long-term perspective, the additional physical, societal and environmental benefits of mega-nourishments may help turn the balance (Oost et al., 2016; Brown et al., 2016). To what extent this is indeed the case depends on the local conditions: not every location is suitable along a coast with so many vested interests and so much infrastructure (beach re- sorts, harbours, marinas, outfalls, landfalls, etc.). Step 6: Governance context The Netherlands government has a clear coastal maintenance policy in R IU S 7: B U ILD IN G W ITH N A TU R E P ER SP EC TIV ES 60 place, with well-defined strategic and operational objectives at the scale of the Dutch coast. Prevailing laws and regulations explicitly support the policy of dynamically preserving the coastline with the BKL as a reference, but this is not (yet) the case for the coastal foundation. Hence beach and foreshore nourishments have a legal basis and can be enforced, but other types of nour- ishments, like concentrated mega-nourishment, can be challenged by oppo- nents claiming negative effects. This means that at present, mega-nourish- ments on the North Sea coast require consensus of many stakeholders, which clearly reduces the agility of mega-nourishments as a method of large-scale coastal maintenance. On the other hand, positive side-effects of mega-nour- ishments increase the number of potentially supportive stakeholders, hence the possibilities for finding additional funding sources. With the lessons learned from the Sand Motor experiment, application of multiple mega-nourishments seems technically and ecologically feasible, though possibly complicated by the involvement of many stakeholders and vested interests. Eco-enhanced scour protection (marine, hard, biotic) Step 1: Strategic and operational objectives and breakdown of the realisation scheme The North Sea is rich in marine resources including fisheries, aggregates (sand and gravel), oil and gas. It is one of the most productive seas in the world, with a wide range of plankton, fish, seabirds and benthic communi- ties. The area contains some of the world’s most important fishing grounds. The deeper northern regions of the North Sea have a higher diversity and less biomass than the shallower southern regions. Many human activities have an impact on the biodiversity of the North Sea. The marine ecosystems are under intense pressure from fishing, fish farming, seaweed farming, invading spe- cies, nutrient input, recreational use, habitat loss and climate changes; most notable are the effects of fisheries and eutrophication. As a result, the whole marine ecosystem in the North Sea is deteriorating. Similar trends are ob- served in many shelf seas around the world, caused by intensifying exploita- tion, eutrophication and pollution. (see, for instance, http://www.coastalwi- ki.org/wiki/Biodiversity_in_the_European_Seas#_note-North_Sea, http:// reports.eea.europa.eu/report_2002_0524_154909/en). Offshore wind farms play an important role in the transition to sus- tainable energy and much effort and money are spent to develop them. This raises the question to what extent these efforts can be directed to the ben- efit of ecosystem restoration. Commercial fisheries are not allowed in wind farms in the Netherlands sector of the North Sea (Staatscourant, 2018), but this only provides potential shelter and breeding ground to species that easily A S Y S T EM A T IC O B JEC T IF Y IN G B U ILD IN G W IT H N A T U R E S T R A T EG IES: TO W A R D S SC A LE-R ESO LV IN G P O LIC IES 61 migrate, such as fish. Less mobile species, such as crustaceans, reef building worms and shellfish, once removed from the area, do not easily come back via re-colonisation, by lack of larvae sources, favourable biophysical or biochem- ical feedbacks, and specific habitats. Recently, the Netherlands Government added an extra requirement to tenders for new wind farms in the North Sea: ‘to make demonstrable efforts to design and build the wind farm in such a way that it actively enhances the sea’s ecosystem, helping to foster conservation efforts and goals relating to sustainable use of species and habitats that occur naturally in the Netherlands’ (Regulation 2.15, Netherlands Enterprise Agency, 2018). This nature-inclusive design require- ment stimulates engineering consultants and contractors to look for eco-en- hancing scour protection methods. It illustrates the government’s addition- al strategic objective to rehabilitate the North Sea ecosystem and make wind farms contribute to it through eco-enhancing measures (operational objective). In the framework of the overarching strategy towards renewable energy, the government has designated a number of areas in the North Sea for wind farming (figure 3). Figure 3. Designated wind park areas in the Dutch part of the North Sea R IU S 7: B U ILD IN G W ITH N A TU R E P ER SP EC TIV ES 62 Realisation of these wind parks, however, is left to the market, so there is no all-encompassing realisation scheme consisting of envisaged individual wind park projects. Moreover, the open formulation of the above requirement does not enforce a coherent overarching realization scheme of eco-enhancing measures. Therefore, we will focus on the scalability of a single class of meas- ures, viz. providing suitable hard substrate. Step 2: Strategic and operational objectives per wind farm project Apart from the obvious objective to produce a certain amount of wind en- ergy, the government has introduced an additional strategic objective, namely the requirement to contribute to local ecosystem rehabilitation. This can be realized by creating habitat for a number of designated species (operational objective). Depending on the situation, waves and currents may necessitate the seabed around the substructure (mostly monopiles) to be protected against scour, usually by a rock filter (figure 4). The design of these filters used to be based exclusively on technical and financial grounds, but in light of the 2018 requirement it has become attractive to explore how they can contribute to ecosystem rehabilitation. Figure 4. Scour protection around monopiles: opportunity for habitat creation? (source: Van Oord) A S Y S T EM A T IC O B JEC T IF Y IN G B U ILD IN G W IT H N A T U R E S T R A T EG IES: TO W A R D S SC A LE-R ESO LV IN G P O LIC IES 63 Step 3: Project performance There are basically three methods to ecologically enhance wind farms (Groen, 2019): 1. Habitat creation or enhancement, such that it is more suitable for a num- ber of target species. Scour protection designs can be adapted to achieve this, but also specially designed elements placed in the space between the monopiles (hard substrate, rock mounds, etc.). 2. Stock enhancement, which aims at increasing the abundance of less mo- bile target species by introducing individuals (larvae, juveniles, adults) that have been reared or cultivated elsewhere. This new stock should be large enough to start a viable and self-sustaining colony within the wind farm. 3. Food enhancement, which aims at increasing the amount of food avail- able for the target species. This may involve additional habitat creation and stock enhancement for the food or prey species. Table 2 gives a suitability index of wind farms for a number of represent- ative species as a function of the degree of eco-enhancement. NS WF + SP WF + ESP WF + SP + SE WF + ESP + SE Atlantic cod 2 4 5 4 5 European lobster 1 2 3 2 5 Flat oyster 0 2 3 3 5 Ross worm 1 3 4 3 4 Total 4 11 15 12 19 Table 2. Suitability index (0 = very unsuitable, 5 = very suitable) of wind farms (WF) in the North Sea (NS) with a standard scour protection (SP), an enhanced scour protection (ESP) and stock enhancement (SE). Source: Groen (2019). Focusing on habitat creation for crustaceans and shellfish, eco-enhance- ment should aim at the creation of shelter or hard substrate. Rock-filter scour protections around monopiles (figure 4) provide hard substrate, as well as shelter in the spaces between the rocks. If the top layer of the filter is made coarse enough, this may provide shelter to larger crustaceans, such as lob- sters. Also, between the monopiles of a wind farm there is space for habitat creation. Hard substrate combined with spat seeding may help the return of the flat oyster in the North Sea (Kamermans et al, 2018). Offshore mussel cul- tures, once economically attractive, are expected to help enrich the marine ecosystem (Van den Burg et al., 2017). Even though fishing within them is not allowed, wind farms may function as breeding, seeding and nursery grounds for the surrounding sea, thus contributing to the stock for fisheries there. R IU S 7: B U ILD IN G W ITH N A TU R E P ER SP EC TIV ES 64 From an ecological perspective boundary conditions are relevant. There- fore, the potential to optimise the ecological value of a windfarm depends on the location in the ecosystem. Factors such as depth and typology of the seabed, hydrodynamics of waves and currents, distance from coasts and riv- er mouths that govern availability of nutrient and light, suspended sediment concentration and sediment transport, and characteristics of the surrounding ecosystem will determine the type of species communities that can establish successfully within the wind farm. Groen (2019) analysed for a number of species the potential contribution of the Gemini wind farm, a 600 MW wind park in the North Sea north of Gro- ningen, consisting of two plots of 75 monopile-based turbines. Apart from modifying the rock-filters with a coarser armour layer, he added rock piles, concrete tubes and shell-filled nets in the remaining space. Moreover, he im- ported lobsters and oysters as stock enhancement. Table 2 gives an overview of indicative costs and estimated effects. It shows that significant stock in- creases can be achieved, but at significant extra costs, especially of the coars- er armour layer and the adaptation of the filter it necessitates. Note, however, that these extra costs are minor as compared with total costs of the wind park. Food enhancement will partly be natural, because the seabed is no longer disturbed and mobile species will re-colonize the area. A man-made contri- bution could be to discard by-catch from passing fishing vessels, but this is by no means sufficient enough and, at the moment, this is against prevail- ing regulations (in the EU by-catch has to be landed). So far, monitoring of ecological post-implementation project performance is not enforced by wind farm regulations from the Netherlands Government. This will hamper as- sessment of project performance from a nature-inclusive design perspective, hence feedback of experience onto new projects. Original design Enhanced design Costs (1000 US$) Filter 1995 2888 - 4115 Armour 2095 2851 Rock piles - 68 Concrete tubes - 184 Shell-filled nets - 153 Lobster stock enhancement - 288 Oyster stock enhancement - 955 Total 4090 7387-8614 Effects Estimated number of codfish 1,500 - 93,000 3,000 - 240,000 Estimated number of lobsters < 1,000 2,000 - 36,000 Estimated number of oysters < 1,000 > 20,000 Estimated area covered by Ross worm 15,000 m2 22,000 m2 Table 3. Indicative costs and effects of eco-enhancing the design of the 150 monopile 600 MW Gemini wind farm. Source: Groen (2019) A S Y S T EM A T IC O B JEC T IF Y IN G B U ILD IN G W IT H N A T U R E S T R A T EG IES: TO W A R D S SC A LE-R ESO LV IN G P O LIC IES 65 Step 4: Objectives met? In the example shown, the strategic objective of contributing to ecolog- ical enhancement will probably be met. Since concrete operational objec- tives have not been defined, it is not possible to establish the extent to which they are met. Since the effects are estimates based on ecological knowledge gleaned from other locations and other substrates, and there is an influence of the local boundary conditions on what habitats will be established, there is uncertainty how much of the estimates will be (partly) achieved in reality. Step 5: Overall strategic and operational objective(s) met by the scheme as a whole? As long as there are neither quantified objectives, nor a coherent realisa- tion scheme, this question cannot be be answered. Yet, the potential effects of a single 0.6 GW wind park (Table 3, bottom part), combined with the am- bition of realising as much as 11.5 GW wind energy production on the Dutch Continental Shelf of the North Sea by 2030 (also see Figure 3), gives the hope that there is potential of a significant degree of larger-scale ecosystem reha- bilitation. It can be envisaged that the large scale and wide distribution of off- shore wind farms will act as stepping stones for species to re-colonise large parts of the North Sea. This needs to be supported by an overarching policy framework that sets clear ecological goals, that allows a translation into oper- ational objectives, otherwise well-meant initiatives per wind park are bound to be wide ranging in technical solutions, and suboptimal or ineffective at the larger scale. Step 6: Governance context In order for this rehabilitation potential to materialise, co-ordination between wind park developments now and in the future is necessary. This requires an overarching ecological restoration strategy, setting targets for bi- odiversity and ecosystem dynamics and resilience. This must be supported by national or international legislation enabling the implementation of this strategy. In that regard, the aforementioned requirement of the Ministry of Economic Affairs (2018), though not objectifiable enough, can be considered as a sign of political will. 3. Other cases The applicability of the BwN philosophy, and the need to consider the upscaling potential of individual projects, is much wider than the two exam- ples described above. Environments in which BwN has been applied range from marine, via coastal and estuarine, to riverine and inland lacustrine. The R IU S 7: B U ILD IN G W ITH N A TU R E P ER SP EC TIV ES 66 infrastructure development may involve abiotic interventions (sand, mud, rock) intended to enhance the ecosystem, biotic ones (seeds, larvae, vege- tation, biobuilders) meant to aid or replace hard engineering structures, or mixtures of the two (see Table 4 for a number of examples). Environment Abiotic Mixed Biotic Marine Landscaped sand extraction sites (de Jong et al., 2015) Eco-enhanced scour protection (Lengkeek et al., 2017) Coral rehabilitation (Doropoulos et al., 2019) Increase speed of habitat recovery by depth variation Rehabilitate shelf sea ecosystem by habitat creation Restore ecosystem by seeding or transplanting coral Coastal Sand Motor (Luijendijk & van Oudenhove, 2019) Mangrove rehabilitation (Winterwerp et al., 2013) Marrowgrass plantation (McHarg, 1969) Reduce effective impact on submarine ecosystem / Create sandy supratidal habitat for pioneers Restore mangrove-based ecosystem and fish stock Create conditions for pioneer dune vegetation Estuarine Shoal nourishment (van der Werf et al., 2019) Oyster reefs (Walles et al., 2016) Spartina introduction (Chen at al., 2008) Restore intertidal habitat and bird foraging area Maintain intertidal habitat / formation of live oyster banks Maintain intertidal marsh / create habitat for other species Riverine Longitudinal training dams (Collas et al., 2017) Willow forest foreshore (de Vries et al, 2021) Reedbed creation (Sussex Wildlife Trust, 2013) Create more diverse river bed habitat Restore native vegetation, create wetland habitat Create habitat for endangered bird species Lacustrine Houtribdijk sandy foreshore (Steetzel, 2017) Marker Wadden (Natuurmonumenten, 2019) Reedbed creation (Sussex Wildlife Trust, 2013) Create sand-rich habitat for lacustrine vegetation Create bird-paradise / clean up surrounding waters Create habitat for endangered bird species Table 4. Examples of ecological objectives (obj.) to which BwN-solutions (case) in different environments contribute 4. Discussion The cases described herein illustrate that for BwN solutions to achieve their full potential at the system scale, they need to be based on a thorough understanding of the natural system, plausibly embedded in a large-scale strategy, as well as part of a larger scale co-ordinated policy arrangement, supported by corresponding legislation and regulations. Moreover, tech- niques to quantify the effects of multiple BwN projects at the scale of the am- bient biotic and abiotic systems need to be developed or improved and sup- ported, more than at present, by post-project monitoring programs. This will ultimately enable plausible estimates of the regional-scale effects and eval- A S Y S T EM A T IC O B JEC T IF Y IN G B U ILD IN G W IT H N A T U R E S T R A T EG IES: TO W A R D S SC A LE-R ESO LV IN G P O LIC IES 67 uation against overarching strategic and operational objectives at this scale level. Since it interacts with the natural system, and is part of the natural sys- tem, BwN inherently involves uncertainties as it is subject to natural variabil- ity and dynamics. This means that plausible estimates of the effects are the best one can give, exact quantities make no sense. It also means that objec- tives concerning the ecosystem need to be formulated in approximate terms and should focus on the system’s resilience, rather than on numbers of in- dividual species. A way forward could be habitat area mapping (specific for each species community) and habitat quality assessment (considering various kinds of local influence factors and larger-scale factors such as connectivity). They can be the basis for estimating both local and large-scale effects. If cli- mate change comes into play, the rate of change of environmental conditions such as temperature is important. Since the infrastructural projects applying BwN solutions are often designed for many years ahead, climate change sce- narios have to be taken into account when considering the long-term effects. The present analysis focuses mainly on the ecosystem, but other envi- ronmental aspects, such as carbon and nitrate emission and sequestration also need to be considered. Greenhouse gas emissions of dredging operations to realise sandy solutions can be optimised, but so far, the costs of emission reduction are often much higher than the value society attributes to it at the emission market. CO2 as well as nitrate are bound by vegetation, but they also stimulate certain species, so the question is whether it is the desired vege- tation that survives in the long run. This raises the issue of maintenance of the nature component of BwN solutions in order to keep them functioning. Post-project monitoring is vital to make progress here and allow future im- provement to such BwN designs. 5. Conclusion Reality-checking of BwN-solutions for larger-scale applicability requires two perspectives: (1) what is required to realise the large-scale strategic ob- jectives and (2) what is the performance of a single BwN-project in the light of these requirements? The Frame of Reference method offers a systematic way to evaluate BwN-solutions from these two perspectives. The cases considered herein make clear that plausible quantification of effects and evaluation of effectiveness are only possible if objectives have been formulated in quantifiable terms. They also show that effectively apply- ing multiple BwN-solutions at a regional scale requires a well-defined over- arching strategy and legislation directing realisation. In many cases, both are still lacking. R IU S 7: B U ILD IN G W ITH N A TU R E P ER SP EC TIV ES 68 Yet, it has become clear that many BwN-solutions have a distinct up- scaling potential for many types of ecosystems. It is evident that post-imple- mentation monitoring is scarce, hampering the iterative process of the FoR and therefore the degree of learning from realised innovations. Mainstream- ing BwN clearly requires more work at various fronts and by various parties. Acknowledgements Part of the work done for this paper is part of the BwN innovation pro- gramme, which was funded jointly by the partners of the EcoShape consorti- um, the Netherlands government, the European Fund for Regional Develop- ment and the Municipality of Dordrecht. A S Y S T EM A T IC O B JEC T IF Y IN G B U ILD IN G W IT H N A T U R E S T R A T EG IES: TO W A R D S SC A LE-R ESO LV IN G P O LIC IES 69 References Bridges, T. S., Bourne, E. M., King, J. K., Kuzmitski, H. K., Moynihan, E. B., & Suedel, B. C. (2018). Engineering With Nature: an atlas [special report]. https://doi.org/10.21079/11681/27929 Brown, J. M., Phelps, J. J. C., Barkwith, A., Hurst, M. D., Ellis, M. A., & Plater, A. J. (2016). The effectiveness of beach mega-nourishment, assessed over three management epochs. Journal of Environmental Man- agement, 184, 400–408. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.09.090 Chen, Z., Li, B., Zhong, Y., & Chen, J. (2004). Local competitive effects of introduced Spartina alterniflora on Scirpus mariqueter at Dongtan of Chongming Island, the Yangtze River estuary and their potential ecological consequences. Hydrobiologia, 528(1–3), 99–106. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10750-004-1888-9 Collas, F. P. L., Buijse, A. D., van den Heuvel, L., van Kessel, N., Schoor, M. M., Eerden, H., & Leuven, R. S. E. W. (2018). Longitudinal training dams mitigate effects of shipping on environmental conditions and fish density in the littoral zones of the river Rhine.  Science of The Total Environment,  619–620, 1183– 1193. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.10.299 de Jong, M. F., Baptist, M. J., Lindeboom, H. J., & Hoekstra, P. (2015). Short-term impact of deep sand ex- traction and ecosystem-based landscaping on macrozoobenthos and sediment characteristics. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 97(1–2), 294–308. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2015.06.002 de Vriend, H.J., & Van Koningsveld, M., (2012). Building with Nature. Thinking, acting and interacting differ- ently. EcoShape de Vriend, H. J., van Koningsveld, M., Aarninkhof, S. G. J., de Vries, M. B., & Baptist, M. J. (2015). Sustain- able hydraulic engineering through building with nature. Journal of Hydro-Environment Research, 9(2), 159–171. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jher.2014.06.004 de Vries, M., van Koningsveld, M., Aarninkhof, S., & de Vriend, H. (2021). A systematic design approach for objectifying Building with Nature solutions. Research in Urbanism Series, 7, 29-50. https://doi. org/10.47982/rius.7.124 de Weerdt, B.J. (2015). Effectiveness of the Sand Engine: An objective evaluation with the Frame of Reference approach [ MSc thesis]. Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands. http://resolver.tudelft.nl/ uuid:e786163a-8e01-46b8-9bb6-cbef503b534d Delta Committee. (2008). Working together with water; a living land builds for its future [technical report]. Hollandia printing. http://www.deltacommissie.com/doc/deltareport_full.pdf. Groen, O.D. (2019). Nature-enhancing design of scour protection for monopiles in the North Sea [MSc thesis]. Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands. http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:f612bc90-785c-4706- 90e6-b7116f4b8077 Kamermans, P., Walles, B., Kraan, M., van Duren, L., Kleissen, F., van der Have, T., Smaal, A., & Poelman, M. (2018). Offshore Wind Farms as Potential Locations for Flat Oyster (Ostrea edulis) Restoration in the Dutch North Sea. Sustainability, 10(11), 3942. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10113942 Laboyrie, H.P., van Koningsveld, M., Aarninkhof, S.G.J., van Parys, M., Lee, M., Jensen, A., Csiti, A. & Kol- man, R. (Eds.). (2018). Dredging for Sustainable Infrastructure. CEDA/IADC. https://www.iadc-dredging. R IU S 7: B U ILD IN G W ITH N A TU R E P ER SP EC TIV ES 70 com/ul/cms/fck-uploaded/documents/contents-dredging-for-sustainable-infrastructure.pdf Lengkeek, W., Didderen, K., Teunis, M., Driessen, F., Coolen, J. W. P., Bos, O. G., Vergouwen, S. A., Raa- ijmakers, T. C., De Vries, M. B., & Van Koningsveld, M. (2017).  Eco-friendly design of scour protection: potential enhancement of ecological functioning in offshore wind farms: Towards an implementation guide and experimental set-up [report]. Bureau Waardenburg; No. 17-001. https://edepot.wur.nl/411374 Luijendijk, A., & van Oudenhove, A., (Eds). (2019). The Sand Motor: a nature-based response to climate change; findings and reflections of the interdisciplinary research program NatureCoast. TU Delft Open. https://pure.tudelft.nl/portal/files/53666598/2019_Luijendijk_van_OUdenhoven_eds_The_Sand_Mo- tor_A_Nature_Based_Response_to_Climate_Change_NATURECOAST.pdf Marchand, M., Sanchez-Arcilla, A., Ferreira, M., Gault, J., Jiménez, J. A., Markovic, M., Mulder, J., van Rijn, L., Stănică, A., Sulisz, W., & Sutherland, J. (2011). Concepts and science for coastal erosion management – An introduction to the Conscience framework. Ocean & Coastal Management, 54(12), 859–866. https:// doi.org/10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2011.06.005 McHarg, I. L. (1995). Design with Nature (25th ed.). Wiley. Mulder, J. P. M., Nederbragt, G., Steetzel, H. J., van Koningsveld, M., & Wang, Z. B. (2007). Different imple- mentation scenarios for the large scale coastal policy of The Netherlands.  Coastal Engineering 2006, 1705–1717. https://doi.org/10.1142/9789812709554_0144 Natuurmonumenten. (2019). Marker Wadden. https://www.natuurmonumenten.nl/projecten/mark- er-wadden/english-version Netherlands Enterprise Agency. (2018, October). Project and Site Description Hollandse Kust (zuid) - Wind Farm Sites III and IV. https://offshorewind.rvo.nl/file/download/55039494 Oost, A., van der Leij A.C., de Bel, M., Oude Essink, G., & Löffler, M. (2016). De bruikbaarheid van het con- cept Zandmotor [The usability of the sand motor concept]. Deltares report 1221025-000. De Zandmotor. https://dezandmotor.nl/app/uploads/2020/10/rapport-bruikbaarheid-zandmotor-4-juli.pdf Staatscourant 2018, 22588 | Overheid.nl > Officiële bekendmakingen. (2018, April 26). Policy rule con- cerning the establishment of a safety zone for wind parks at sea [in Dutch]. Overheid.nl. https://zoek. officielebekendmakingen.nl/stcrt-2018-22588.html Steetzel, H., van der Goot, F., Fiselier, J., de Lange, M., Penning, E., van Santen, R., & Vuik, V. (2017). Build- ing with Nature pilot sandy foreshore Houtribdijk: design and behaviour of a sandy dike defence sys- tem. In T. Aagaard, R. Deigaard & D. Fuhman (Eds.), Proceedings of Coastal Dynamics 2017 (pp. 1358- 1369). http://coastaldynamics2017.dk/proceedings.html Stive, M.J.F., Roelvink, J.A., & de Vriend, H.J. (1990- July 2-6). Large-scale coastal evolution concept: the Dutch coast. In B.L. Edge (Eds.), Twenty-Second Coastal Engineering Conference; proceedings of the International Conference. Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands. http://resolver.tudelft.nl/ uuid:3c0275e7-cde8-46ff-a06c-02e47014e5f4 Sussex Wildlife Trust. (2013-March). How to create and manage reedbeds? https://assets.sussexwild- lifetrust.org.uk/create-and-manage-reedbeds-2.pdf A S Y S T EM A T IC O B JEC T IF Y IN G B U ILD IN G W IT H N A T U R E S T R A T EG IES: TO W A R D S SC A LE-R ESO LV IN G P O LIC IES 71 van den Burg, S. W. K., Kamermans, P., Blanch, M., Pletsas, D., Poelman, M., Soma, K., & Dalton, G. (2017). Business case for mussel aquaculture in offshore wind farms in the North Sea. Marine Policy, 85, 1–7. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2017.08.007 van der Werf, J. J., de Vet, P. L. M., Boersema, M. P., Bouma, T. J., Nolte, A. J., Schrijvershof, R. A., Soissons, L. M., Stronkhorst, J., van Zanten, E., & Ysebaert, T. (2019). An integral approach to design the Roggen- plaat intertidal shoal nourishment. Ocean & Coastal Management, 172, 30–40. https://doi.org/10.1016/j. ocecoaman.2019.01.023 van der Bilt, V. (2019). Assessing emission performance of dredging projects[ MSc thesis]. Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands. http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:ab6d12ea-34fe-4577-b72c-6aa688e0d- 1bf van Koningsveld, M., & Mulder, J.P.M. (2004). Sustainable Coastal Policy Developments in the Neth- erlands. A Systematic Approach Revealed. Journal of Coastal Research, 202, 375–385. https://doi. org/10.2112/1551-5036(2004) 020[0375:SCPDIT]2.0.CO;2 Walles, B., Troost, K., van den Ende, D., Nieuwhof, S., Smaal, A. C., & Ysebaert, T. (2016). From artificial structures to self-sustaining oyster reefs.  Journal of Sea Research,  108, 1–9. https://doi.org/10.1016/j. seares.2015.11.007 Winterwerp, J. C., Erftemeijer, P. L. A., Suryadiputra, N., van Eijk, P., & Zhang, L. (2013). Defining Eco-Mor- phodynamic Requirements for Rehabilitating Eroding Mangrove-Mud Coasts.  Wetlands,  33(3), 515– 526. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13157-013-0409-x R IU S 7: B U ILD IN G W ITH N A TU R E P ER SP EC TIV ES 72