Abstract
The complexity of the study of landscape and urban green infrastructure, and the perceptual aspects required to characterize them, calls for a qualitative analysis. To-gether with a series of case studies details and nuances arise when analyzing what the liter-ature has called the "non-expert" view of the landscape. The study of urban green infra-structure, specifically its perception, is carried out using a qualitative methodology, with an analysis based on NVIVO software. We coded a series of semi-structured interviews conducted in metropolitan parks on the city-center fringe. The coding process, although not linear, is increasingly selective and specific, starting with an open coding (general, of all the interviews), followed by an axial coding, and finishing with a selective coding, so that a correlation is created between the most referenced concepts throughout the interviews (called "nodes"). The main objective of the proposed methodological analysis is to shed light on the perception of the elements that are part of the green infrastructure network of the Madrid metropolitan area. The following nomenclature was used to refer to de views on the landscape: "technical" (or trained) and "everyday" (or day-to-day) to refer to the views of the landscape. In the light of the results obtained from the qualitative analysis of the interviews, we can see how a relatively small sample can yield significant conclusions regarding both the methodology itself and issues intrinsically linked to landscape such as place attachment, sense of belonging, relationship with the surroundings or image of the city. Results were also obtained in relation to the urban green infrastructure itself, such as levels and relevance of connectivity, multifunctionality and accessibility.