The âStockholm tree pitâ method was created to help trees thrive in paved-over urban spaces. Now, itâs taking root across Europe.
When Stockholmâs Traffic Office conducted a general assessment of street traffic in the Swedish capital in 2001, it came to the shocking conclusion that two-thirds of all trees in the city center were dead or dying.
City authorities agreed that an urgent response was needed to nurse these leafy urban ecosystem pillars back to health.
Under his leadership, various technologies and materials were tested in an attempt to create a more suitable living space for trees in the urban environment.
The design involves digging a pit and constructing a frame underground around the treeâs roots, and then filling said pit with a mixture of soil and stone, sometimes including biochar, to both aerate and fertilize the soil. These permeable layers are very strong and physically adaptable but also allow stormwater to flow in, meaning the trees are provided with sufficient air and water naturally. They also allow rainwater to be soaked up â a necessity amid more extreme weather brought on by climate change.
Proponents say the method has a number of benefits, including the fact that pits can be installed around existing trees, they can bear the weight of heavy-vehicle traffic, they require little topsoil â a resource that is becoming scarce â and they need less watering than traditionally-planted trees.
This approach, which allows tree roots to thrive beneath hard surfacing, ergo allowing healthy trees to grow within the modern built environment, is particularly relevant as cities attempt to re-green and reforest in the face of climate change.
According to the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe, urban forests can help âfuture-proofâ cities, which are responsible for about 75 percent of global CO2 emissions. Sustainable urban forestry, it says, can bring multiple benefits, such as lowering temperatures, improving public health, creating habitats for biodiversity, sequestering carbon, generating green jobs, and mitigating risks of floods and landslides.
âItâs more important now than ever before,â says Ryan Klein, an assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Horticulture at the University of Florida. âWe have these massive populations in urban areas. And weâre seeing more extreme weather like hurricanes, wildfires and prolonged droughts. Trees can help to offset some of these negative effects.â
However, amid the rush to rapidly reforest cities, experts like Klein warn that due to ineffective methods and techniques being used, itâs common to see urban trees in poor health, and trees planted in cities often have very high mortality rates.
âWe have the understanding of how to grow healthier, more sustainable and resilient forests,â says Klein. âThe research backs it. Unfortunately, we donât always invest the time, money or internal know-how on implementing this.â
A review of 16 scientific studies on urban tree mortality, published in 2019, found that in the first five years after planting, 6.6 to 7 percent of trees died annually.
âUrban soils are not very tree-friendly currently,â says Rik De Vreese, leader of the Urban Forestry Team at the European Forestry Institute. âItâs quite a serious threat.â
When trees arenât properly anchored, De Vreese adds, it can also lead to other issues, such as trunks falling over and causing damage or roots warping sidewalks.
However, the Stockholm Tree Pit method â and the way that itâs been implemented in Sweden â is helping urban forests genuinely take root.
There, according to research by the municipality, the circumference of a selection of those planted trees increased from 30 to 35 centimeters to 70 to 83 centimeters between 2004 and 2013, even surpassing that of trees without the tree pits that have been there for more than 80 years. The latest figures from 2024 saw them reach between 100 and 136 centimeters.
The municipality estimates that 2.3 million liters of rainwater are managed by the trees per year, and consequently, 4,600 square meters of roofs and sidewalks have been disconnected from the sewage system, reducing the burden on water treatment services.
Ben Rose, the principal arboricultural consultant at U.K. tree service Bosky Trees and the founder of Stockholm Tree Pits, a U.K.-based company that produces the equipment required to make tree pits, says that he has planted about 500 trees using the Stockholm model in the U.K. since he began in 2019, mostly as part of small-scale pilot projects.
âThe approach is very suitable for use in urban situations, particularly in car parks, in plazas, and beside walkways or cycle paths,â says Rose.
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Yet there are some drawbacks to the system. Installation costs can be high, the pits can require a large amount of space to install, and it is impossible to reuse existing soil. In addition, for now there is a relative dearth of professionals who know how to construct tree pits.
âOur main concern is the price,â says De Vreese, whose team is currently studying the importance of âstructural soilsâ like those deployed by the tree pits. âExcavating the soil surrounding the tree and refilling it is no small job.â
And while Professor Klein praises the Stockholm Tree Pitâs use of structural soil and how effective itâs proven to be, he notes that the long-term success of urban forestry also relies on other factors such as the supply of high quality nursery stock and proactive tree management such as routine pruning by municipalities.
âIf we donât have these we are setting ourselves up for failure,â he says. âSome cities do the bare minimum. In the U.S.A., itâs the wild west. But others, like Stockholm, are proactive, and they have public officials seriously behind it. Thatâs what we need.â
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Jim Streacker (of the West 123rd Street Garden) and I planted some tree pits with a species ('doh I forget the name) which is thought to deter dogs from urinating on location! Â They look much better, don't they? Â Harlem's West 123rd Street between 6th and 7th Ave is really a lovely block, and not just because its one away from my own!