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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33375100

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Lack of physical activity (PA) is the fourth risk factor for all-cause mortality. Regular PA reduces noncommunicable disease (NCD) and mortality risk. The built environment (BE) is a determinant of spontaneous daily PA. Professionals who plan and build the BE therefore affect public health. We tested the hypothesis of a lack of formal pregraduate training about associations between the BE, PA and health in architecture, landscape architecture, and urban design academic degree programs (DPs) in Switzerland. METHODS: We reached out to all DPs in Switzerland to ask if and how these associations are taught. For those declaring to teach the topic, the program syllabus and course material were inspected. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: For 30 out of 33 identified programs, information for the analysis was obtained. A total of 18 declared teaching the BE, PA and health associations, but this could be confirmed for only 5 after verifying the course content. Teaching principles of building PA-promoting BE represents an underutilized potential for public health promotion. CONCLUSIONS: There is a need to introduce formal learning objectives in architecture, landscape architecture, and urban design DPs in Switzerland on the associations between BE, PA and health. It is likely that similar needs exist in other countries.


Subject(s)
Architecture/education , Built Environment , City Planning/education , Curriculum , Environment Design , Exercise , Health Promotion , Humans , Noncommunicable Diseases , Switzerland
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32121293

ABSTRACT

Urban areas offer many opportunities for people with disabilities, but limited accessibility may prevent their full engagement in society. It has been recommended that the experience-based perspective of people with disabilities should be an integral part of the discussion on urban accessibility, complementing other stakeholder expertise to facilitate the design of more inclusive environments. The goals of this mixed-method study were to develop knowledge mobilization (KM) strategies to share experience-based findings on accessibility and evaluate their impact for various urban stakeholders. Using a participatory approach, various KM strategies were developed including videos, a photo exhibit and an interactive game. These strategies were evaluated based on various impact indicators such as reach, usefulness, partnerships and practice changes, using quantitative and qualitative methods. The findings suggested that the KM strategies were effective in raising the awareness of various urban stakeholders and providing information and guidance to urban planning practices related to accessibility.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel/education , Architectural Accessibility/standards , City Planning/education , City Planning/standards , Disabled Persons , Environment Design/standards , Guidelines as Topic , Administrative Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Canada , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28698462

ABSTRACT

Health Impact Assessment (HIA) courses are teaching public health and urban planning students how to assess the likely health effects of proposed policies, plans, and projects. We suggest that public health and urban planning have complimentary frameworks for training practitioners to address the living conditions that affect health. Planning perspectives emphasize practical skills for impacting community change, while public health stresses professional purpose and ethics. Frameworks from both disciplines can enhance the HIA learning experience by helping students tackle questions related to community impact, engagement, social justice, and ethics. We also propose that HIA community engagement processes can be enriched through an empathetic practice that focuses on greater personal introspection.


Subject(s)
City Planning/education , Health Impact Assessment , Public Health/education , Community Participation , Humans , Interdisciplinary Communication , Interdisciplinary Placement , Students
4.
Asclepio ; 67(1): 0-0, ene.-jun. 2015.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-140640

ABSTRACT

La creación de la JAE y su política de pensiones promovió no solo los elementos integrantes del discurso oficial, sino otros intereses ligados a los enfoques tecnocráticos de los problemas sociales difundidos en la Europa de la modernidad. En este estudio exploramos este segundo efecto, no reconocido suficientemente, mediante el examen de la trayectoria y propuestas de diversos pensionados que viajaron entre 1909 y 1932 a Alemania, Inglaterra, Bélgica, Suiza y Francia (AU)


The establishment of the JAE and the scholarship policy supported by this institution promoted not only the well-known scientific renovation, but other values related in this case to the technocratic views of social problems. The present study is aimed at exploring this second effect, a relatively unattended topic, by the examination of the concerns and purposes of various scholarship holders who traveled between 1909 and 1932 to Germany, England, Belgium, Switzerland, and France (AU)


Subject(s)
History, 19th Century , Humanities/history , Social Problems/history , Social Problems/statistics & numerical data , Science/education , Science/history , Psychology, Industrial/education , Psychology, Industrial/history , Work/history , Germany , England , Belgium , Switzerland , France , City Planning/education , City Planning/history
6.
J Urban Health ; 90 Suppl 1: 62-73, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22983719

ABSTRACT

This article summarizes a process which exemplifies the potential impact of municipal investment on the burden of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in city populations. We report on Developing an evidence-based approach to city public health planning and investment in Europe (DECiPHEr), a project part funded by the European Union. It had twin objectives: first, to develop and validate a vocational educational training package for policy makers and political decision takers; second, to use this opportunity to iterate a robust and user-friendly investment tool for maximizing the public health impact of 'mainstream' municipal policies, programs and investments. There were seven stages in the development process shared by an academic team from Sheffield Hallam University and partners from four cities drawn from the WHO European Healthy Cities Network. There were five iterations of the model resulting from this process. The initial focus was CVD as the biggest cause of death and disability in Europe. Our original prototype 'cost offset' model was confined to proximal determinants of CVD, utilizing modified 'Framingham' equations to estimate the impact of population level cardiovascular risk factor reduction on future demand for acute hospital admissions. The DECiPHEr iterations first extended the scope of the model to distal determinants and then focused progressively on practical interventions. Six key domains of local influence on population health were introduced into the model by the development process: education, housing, environment, public health, economy and security. Deploying a realist synthesis methodology, the model then connected distal with proximal determinants of CVD. Existing scientific evidence and cities' experiential knowledge were 'plugged-in' or 'triangulated' to elaborate the causal pathways from domain interventions to public health impacts. A key product is an enhanced version of the cost offset model, named Sheffield Health Effectiveness Framework Tool, incorporating both proximal and distal determinants in estimating the cost benefits of domain interventions. A key message is that the insights of the policy community are essential in developing and then utilising such a predictive tool.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel/education , Cardiovascular Diseases/economics , City Planning/education , Health Policy/economics , Healthy People Programs/economics , Public Health/economics , Administrative Personnel/economics , Cardiovascular Diseases/epidemiology , Cities/economics , City Planning/economics , Decision Making, Organizational , Europe/epidemiology , European Union/economics , Healthy People Programs/methods , Healthy People Programs/standards , Humans , Investments/economics , Models, Theoretical , Public Health/standards , Vocational Education/methods , Vocational Education/standards , World Health Organization
7.
J Urban Hist ; 38(2): 294-318, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22826891

ABSTRACT

Urban historians have greatly expanded their geographical purview in recent years, incorporating suburbs and hinterlands into their analysis of social and environmental change. Urban environmental historians and suburban historians have played a critical role in the regionalization of urban history over the last decade. This case study of the development of New York City's water supply reveals the benefits of taking a regional approach to urban history. From the New York Public Library to Central Park's Great Lawn to neighborhood parks, the New York City landscape bears the traces of the continuous development of the city's water network. Expansion of the water system in rural hinterlands enabled municipal officials to put urban reservoirs to new uses, creating some of the city's most beloved public spaces. The rehabilitation of urban infrastructure underscores the intimate linkages between rural development and the urban built environment.


Subject(s)
City Planning , Public Health , Sanitation , Urban Population , Urbanization , Water Supply , City Planning/economics , City Planning/education , City Planning/history , City Planning/legislation & jurisprudence , Drinking Water , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , New York City/ethnology , Public Health/economics , Public Health/education , Public Health/history , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Sanitation/economics , Sanitation/history , Sanitation/legislation & jurisprudence , Urban Population/history , Urbanization/history , Urbanization/legislation & jurisprudence , Water Supply/economics , Water Supply/history , Water Supply/legislation & jurisprudence
8.
J Urban Hist ; 38(2): 319-35, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22826892

ABSTRACT

This article analyzes the renovation and construction of the Parc des Princes and the Stade de France in post-Second World War Paris. The history of the two stadia testifies to a shift in the envisioned role of stadia in the Parisian basin between the late 1960s and the end of the twentieth century and stands as evidence for the emergence of new urban planning actors. Both stadia were also critiqued as symbols of broader problems with Parisian urbanization, notably as manifestations of anti-democratic planning processes. At the same time, the Parc and the Stade also reflected an emerging consensus over the role of spectator sport in society, accompanied by attempts to re-envision mass sporting spectatorship as a more democratic and familial practice. This article thus situates the two stadia within the history of Parisian urbanization and within broader global urbanizing processes.


Subject(s)
City Planning , Social Change , Symbolism , Urban Population , Urban Renewal , Urbanization , City Planning/economics , City Planning/education , City Planning/history , City Planning/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , Paris/ethnology , Social Change/history , Urban Population/history , Urban Renewal/economics , Urban Renewal/education , Urban Renewal/history , Urban Renewal/legislation & jurisprudence , Urbanization/history , Urbanization/legislation & jurisprudence
9.
Urban Stud ; 49(3): 543-61, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22500346

ABSTRACT

In this paper, the Curitiba-centred narrative on the success of its urban planning experience will be qualified in light of the complexities of its metropolitan development trajectory. It will be claimed that the institutional vacuum that surrounds Brazilian metropolitan areas in general, and Greater Curitiba in particular, has been intensified by the emergence of a competitive and decentralised state spatial regime, which has consolidated a fragmented and neo-localist system of governance. Preliminary empirical evidence will be provided on the challenges that are being faced within the new regime in articulating socio-spatial, economic and environmental strategies in the direction of a more sustainable metropolitan future.


Subject(s)
City Planning , Local Government , Public Policy , Social Responsibility , Urban Renewal , Brazil/ethnology , Cities/economics , Cities/ethnology , Cities/history , Cities/legislation & jurisprudence , City Planning/economics , City Planning/education , City Planning/history , City Planning/legislation & jurisprudence , Economics/history , Economics/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Local Government/history , Public Policy/economics , Public Policy/history , Public Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Urban Renewal/economics , Urban Renewal/education , Urban Renewal/history , Urban Renewal/legislation & jurisprudence
10.
Int J Urban Reg Res ; 36(2): 261-80, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22518884

ABSTRACT

Many American and European cities have to deal with demographic and economic trajectories leading to urban shrinkage. According to official data, 13% of urban regions in the US and 54% of those in the EU have lost population in recent years. However, the extent and spatial distribution of declining populations differ significantly between Europe and the US. In Germany, the situation is driven by falling birth rates and the effects of German reunification. In the US, shrinkage is basically related to long-term industrial transformation. But the challenges of shrinking cities seldom appeared on the agendas of politicians and urban planners until recently. This article provides a critical overview of the development paths and local strategies of four shrinking cities: Schwedt and Dresden in eastern Germany; Youngstown and Pittsburgh in the US. A typology of urban growth and shrinkage, from economic and demographic perspectives, enables four types of city to be differentiated and the differences between the US and eastern Germany to be discussed. The article suggests that a new transatlantic debate on policy and planning strategies for restructuring shrinking cities is needed to overcome the dominant growth orientation that in most cases intensifies the negative consequences of shrinkage.


Subject(s)
Cities , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Population Dynamics , Residence Characteristics , Socioeconomic Factors , Cities/economics , Cities/ethnology , Cities/history , Cities/legislation & jurisprudence , City Planning/economics , City Planning/education , City Planning/history , City Planning/legislation & jurisprudence , Germany/ethnology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Population Dynamics/history , Residence Characteristics/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history , United States/ethnology
11.
J Urban Hist ; 37(6): 952-74, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22175080

ABSTRACT

Active adult, age-restricted communities are significant to urban history and city planning. As communities that ban the permanent residence of children under the age of nineteen with senior zoning overlays, they are unique experiments in social planning. While they do not originate the concept of the common interest community with its shared amenities, the residential golf course community, or the gated community, Sun Cities and Leisure Worlds do a lot to popularize those physical planning concepts. The first age-restricted community, Youngtown, AZ, opened in 1954. Inspired by amenity-rich trailer courts in Florida, Del Webb added the "active adult" element when he opened Sun City, AZ, in 1960. Two years later, Ross Cortese opened the first of his gated Leisure Worlds. By the twenty-first century, these "lifestyle" communities had proliferated and had expanded their appeal to around 18 percent of retirees, along with influencing the design of intergenerational communities.


Subject(s)
City Planning , Housing , Life Style , Residence Characteristics , Retirement , Arizona/ethnology , City Planning/economics , City Planning/education , City Planning/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Housing/economics , Housing/history , Humans , Intergenerational Relations/ethnology , Life Style/ethnology , Life Style/history , Middle Aged , Residence Characteristics/history , Retirement/economics , Retirement/history , Retirement/psychology , United States/ethnology
12.
Urban Stud ; 48(12): 2537-54, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22081834

ABSTRACT

The new urban politics (NUP) literature has helped to draw attention to a new generation of entrepreneurial urban regimes involved in the competition to attract investment to cities. Interurban competition often had negative environmental consequences for the urban living place. Yet knowledge of the environment was not very central to understanding the NUP. Entrepreneurial urban regimes today are struggling to deal with climate change and reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. Carbon reduction strategies could have profound implications for interurban competition and the politics of urban development. This paper explores the rise of a distinctive low-carbon urban polity­carbon control­and examines its potential ramifications for a new environmental politics of urban development (NEPUD). The NEPUD signals the growing centrality of carbon control in discourses, strategies and struggles around urban development. Using examples from cities in the US and Europe, the paper examines how these new environmental policy considerations are being mainstreamed in urban development politics. Alongside competitiveness, the management of carbon emissions represents a new yet at the same time contestable mode of calculation in urban governance.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants , City Planning , Climate Change , Politics , Public Health , Transportation , Air Pollutants/economics , Air Pollutants/history , City Planning/economics , City Planning/education , City Planning/history , City Planning/legislation & jurisprudence , Climate Change/economics , Climate Change/history , Environment , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Local Government/history , Public Health/economics , Public Health/education , Public Health/history , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Transportation/economics , Transportation/history , Transportation/legislation & jurisprudence , Urban Health/history , Urban Population/history , Urban Renewal/economics , Urban Renewal/education , Urban Renewal/history , Urban Renewal/legislation & jurisprudence , Vehicle Emissions/legislation & jurisprudence
14.
Urban Stud ; 48(4): 737-47, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21584984

ABSTRACT

Club theoretical analysis of migration between asymmetrical cities shows that centralised policy intervention is necessary to ensure the efficient allocation of people between cities. Administrative and economic measures are compared as policy instruments of central government. These instruments are found to differ in their effects on residential allocation and welfare. In particular, a lump-sum tax-transfer programme pools the welfare-creating potentials of cities, thus affecting the efficiency condition. Therefore, lump-sum tax-transfers are superior to both quantity rationing and Pigouvian taxes, and they also activate, rather than stabilise, migration.


Subject(s)
Local Government , Population Density , Public Facilities , Residence Characteristics , Urban Health , City Planning/economics , City Planning/education , City Planning/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Local Government/history , Public Assistance/economics , Public Assistance/history , Public Facilities/economics , Public Facilities/history , Public Facilities/legislation & jurisprudence , Residence Characteristics/history , Social Welfare/economics , Social Welfare/ethnology , Social Welfare/history , Social Welfare/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Welfare/psychology , Urban Health/history , Urban Population/history , Urban Renewal/economics , Urban Renewal/education , Urban Renewal/history
15.
Urban Stud ; 48(4): 749-64, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21584985

ABSTRACT

As millions of people world-wide now live in residential areas with restricted access to the public, the ascent of gated communities can no longer be attributed to incidental or deviant development. Hence this paper makes an attempt to discover the economic rationale behind the gated community phenomenon; it discusses the mainstream theses and outlines 10 theorems for an alternative proposition based on theories of public choice and fiscal federalism. The core theorem asserts that a centrally featured system of government diminishes the ability of local municipalities properly to reflect citizens' demands for local public goods and services, and that this constitutes a strong incentive for people to move into gated communities. In particular, gated and guarded residential developments represent an exit option when local municipalities fail to deploy vital governmental rules and instruments, such as fiscal equivalence and benefit taxation.


Subject(s)
Residence Characteristics , Safety , Socioeconomic Factors , Urban Health , Urban Population , City Planning/economics , City Planning/education , City Planning/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Population Dynamics/history , Residence Characteristics/history , Safety/economics , Safety/history , Safety/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Class/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history , Urban Health/history , Urban Population/history
16.
J Des Hist ; 24(1): 37-58, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21574288

ABSTRACT

In 1929, Walter Gropius developed the "High-Rise Steel Frame Apartment Building" that was based on theories about the emergence of a New Man put forward by sociologist Franz Müller-Lyer. In his lecture at the Congrès International d'Architecture Moderne conference in 1929, Gropius appropriated Müller-Lyer's sociology in order to promote and prompt the re-development of high-rise tenements and master households. Gropius' 1931 contribution to the Deutsche Bauausstellung in Berlin incorporated a full-scale community lounge and a recreation area with sporting equipment, as well as a model and plans for a "High-Rise Steel Frame Apartment Building" that were designed in accordance with Müller-Lyer's theories. While it shows Müller-Lyer's influence, the boxing equipment found in the recreation area reflects the importance that sport, and boxing in particular, had gained after 1900. Boxing was perceived as a sport that would not only further fitness but also raise the spirits and help the inhabitant to succeed in the modern urban environment. By providing boxing equipment, Müller-Lyer's vision, which envisaged master households as furthering a community of peaceful individuals living in a condition of mutual trust, is weakened. In 1923, the sociologist Helmuth Plessner had regarded utopian visions of ideal communities as antithesis to actual events in the Weimar Republic. The embracing of theories that promised an evolutionary and linear development towards peaceful communities can be regarded as a counterreaction to a present that was perceived as an imperfect and temporary condition. Furthermore, Gropius' appropriation of Müller-Lyer's sociology not only helped to distinguish his position from Marxist and socialist theories but also illustrated the contemporary tendency to accept utopian ideas while simultaneously doubting the practicality of some.


Subject(s)
Housing , Masculinity , Men , Recreation , Residence Characteristics , Urban Renewal , City Planning/economics , City Planning/education , City Planning/history , Germany/ethnology , History, 20th Century , Housing/history , Individuality , Masculinity/history , Men/education , Men/psychology , Recreation/economics , Recreation/history , Recreation/physiology , Recreation/psychology , Residence Characteristics/history , Sociology/education , Sociology/history , Sports/economics , Sports/education , Sports/history , Sports/physiology , Sports/psychology , Urban Renewal/economics , Urban Renewal/education , Urban Renewal/history , Utopias/history
17.
Urban Stud ; 48(2): 297-329, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21275196

ABSTRACT

Many local governments are adopting inclusionary zoning (IZ) as a means of producing affordable housing without direct public subsidies. In this paper, panel data on IZ in the San Francisco metropolitan area and suburban Boston are used to analyse how much affordable housing the programmes produce and how IZ affects the prices and production of market-rate housing. The amount of affordable housing produced under IZ has been modest and depends primarily on how long IZ has been in place. Results from suburban Boston suggest that IZ has contributed to increased housing prices and lower rates of production during periods of regional house price appreciation. In the San Francisco area, IZ also appears to increase housing prices in times of regional price appreciation, but to decrease prices during cooler regional markets. There is no evidence of a statistically significant effect of IZ on new housing development in the Bay Area.


Subject(s)
City Planning , Housing , Socioeconomic Factors , Urban Health , Urban Population , Cities/economics , Cities/ethnology , Cities/history , Cities/legislation & jurisprudence , City Planning/economics , City Planning/education , City Planning/history , City Planning/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Housing/economics , Housing/history , Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Assistance/economics , Public Assistance/history , Public Assistance/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Class/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history , United States/ethnology , Urban Health/history , Urban Population/history
18.
Urban Stud ; 48(2): 349-62, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21275198

ABSTRACT

There is growing international interest in the impact of regulatory controls on the supply of housing. Most research focuses on the supply impacts of prescribed limits on land use but housing supply may also be affected by the process of planning monitoring and approval but this is hard to measure in detail. The UK has a particularly restrictive planning regime and a detailed and uncertain process of development control linked to it, but does offer the opportunity of detailed site-based investigation of planning delay. This paper presents the findings of empirical research on the time taken to gain planning permission for selected recent major housing projects in southern England. The scale of delay found was far greater than is indicated by average official data measuring the extent to which local authorities meet planning delay targets. Hedonic modelling indicated that there is considerable variation in the time it takes local authorities to process planning applications. Housing association developments are processed more quickly than those of large developers and small sites appear to be particularly time-intensive. These results suggest that delays in development control may be a significant contributory factor to the low responsiveness of UK housing supply to upturns in market activity.


Subject(s)
City Planning , Housing , Public Policy , Residence Characteristics , Urban Health , City Planning/economics , City Planning/education , City Planning/history , City Planning/legislation & jurisprudence , Government/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Housing/economics , Housing/history , Public Policy/history , Residence Characteristics/history , Social Change/history , United Kingdom/ethnology , Urban Health/history , Urban Population/history
20.
Plan Perspect ; 26(1): 29-53, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21280400

ABSTRACT

This article analyses the advent of participation in French planning as the historical touchstone of a larger shift in urban thinking. It investigates how the interactions between inhabitants, developers, state officials and social scientific experts in the production of large-scale modern housing areas and new towns helped bring about user participation as a category of action and discourse. The article argues that the transformation of inhabitants into active participants entails the development of legitimate 'user knowledge' and therefore - perhaps paradoxically - the continuing involvement of experts. The first part of the article examines how the turn towards mass housing production during the 1950s prompted the question of the user and established the ground for debates about participation. The second part of the article explores the relationship between inhabitant contestation and changing urban planning and policy-making during the 1960s. The focus here is on Sarcelles, which served both as a national urban model, a key object of sociological study, and the main target of national public outcry, and helps to reveal relations between local contestation, national policy and shifts in urban thinking. The last part of the article looks at the concrete influence of ideas of participation on subsequent urban policies during the 1970s.


Subject(s)
City Planning , Housing , Population Dynamics , Urban Health , Urban Population , City Planning/economics , City Planning/education , City Planning/history , City Planning/legislation & jurisprudence , France/ethnology , History, 20th Century , Housing/economics , Housing/history , Housing/legislation & jurisprudence , Population Dynamics/history , Public Assistance/economics , Public Assistance/history , Public Assistance/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Health/economics , Public Health/education , Public Health/history , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Policy/economics , Public Policy/history , Public Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Change/history , Urban Health/history , Urban Population/history
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