66 research outputs found

    Greening Cities in an Urbanizing Age: The Human Health Bases in the Nineteenth and Early Twenty-first Centuries

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    Defined here as the introduction or conservation of outdoor vegetation in cities, urban greening has bloomed during periods of intensive urbanization. This was true in the nineteenth century and it seems to be the case again today, as a range of greening practices is co-arising during a third, and perhaps final, period of global urbanization. Human health has been a recurring theme underlying the enduring aspiration to integrate nature with city. Using change over time as a conceptual frame, this paper offers a comparative assessment of municipal greening in the nineteenth and early twenty-first centuries, focusing on the potential implications upon, and the relationship between, such activity, urban design, and public health. In so doing, the narrative bridges theory, science, and practice, and dovetails with discourse on urban ecosystem services. Part one assesses prominent drivers and types of greening in nineteenth-century industrial cities, a pioneering period in this evolving narrative. Part two reviews contemporary literature on the human health benefits of urban green spaces, and draws comparisons to the Industrial Era. Part three explores potential links between contemporary greening practice and scholarship on related health benefits, wherein proximal greening emerges as a distinct form, and possible norm, for twenty-first-century urban design

    Using Systematic Observations to Understand Conditions that Promote Interracial Experiences in Neighbourhood Parks

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    We analysed observations from 31 neighbourhood parks, with each park mapped into smaller target areas for study, across five US cities generated using the System for Observing Play and Recreation in the Community (SOPARC). In areas where at least two people were observed, less than one-third (31.6%) were populated with at least one white and one non-white person. Park areas that were supervised, had one or more people engaged in vigorous activity, had at least one male and one female present, and had one or more teens present were significantly more likely to involve interracial groups (p \u3c 0.01 for each association). Observations in parks located in interracial neighbourhoods were also more likely to involve interracial groups (p \u3c 0.05). Neighbourhood poverty rate had a significant and negative relationship with the presence of interracial groups, particularly in neighbourhoods that are predominantly non-white. Additional research is needed to confirm the impact of these interactions. Urban planning and public health practitioners should consider the health benefits of interracial contact in the design and programming of neighbourhood parks

    The Role of Street Trees for Pedestrian Safety

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    92312This research report studies the link between street trees and the gap between pedestrians\u2019 perceptions of safety and their actual safety while walking along street corridors. Prior to this report, there was little research highlighting the relationship between street trees and pedestrian safety. The research team undertook two projects to understand the role of street trees and pedestrian safety: (1) An analysis of 181 pedestrian intercept surveys across streets with varying street tree cover; and (2) A GIS mapping analysis that measured urban design variables and street tree characteristics alongside recorded pedestrian-vehicle crashes. Overall, street trees did positively impact pedestrian safety, but the impact was small and further research is needed. These findings support the work of previous research and contain relevant information for street redesign standards and planning, especially Complete Streets guidance and technical assistance. Street trees can serve as an option for applying Complete Streets principles into smaller-scale projects to improve pedestrian mobility and community livability, especially in environmental justice areas. There may also be ways to leverage street tree advocacy and streetscape redevelopment projects through existing funding programs, and promote inter-agency collaboration and public-private partnerships
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