Co-constructing community wellbeing: developing a framework to identify how student community collaborative public space projects impact on community wellbeing

Jones, Matthew and Sara, Rachel (2019) Co-constructing community wellbeing: developing a framework to identify how student community collaborative public space projects impact on community wellbeing. In: Designing for Health & Wellbeing: Home, City, Society. The Interdisciplinary Built Environment . Vernon Press, Delaware, USA, pp. 187-204. ISBN 9781622735129

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Abstract

Summary:
Rapid urbanization represents major threats and challenges to personal and public health. The World Health Organisation identifies the ‘urban health threat’ as three-fold: infectious diseases, non-communicable diseases; and violence and injury from, amongst other things, road traffic. Within this tripartite structure of health issues in the built environment, there are multiple individual issues affecting both the developed and the developing worlds and the global north and south.

Reflecting on a broad set of interrelated concerns about health and the design of the places we inhabit, this book seeks to better understand the interconnectedness and potential solutions to the problems associated with health and the built environment. Divided into three key themes: home, city, and society, each section presents a number of research chapters that explore global processes, transformative praxis and emergent trends in architecture, urban design and healthy city research. Drawing together practicing architects, academics, scholars, public health professional and activists from around the world to provide perspectives on design for health, this book includes emerging research on: healthy homes, walkable cities, design for ageing, dementia and the built environment, health equality and urban poverty, community health services, neighbourhood support and wellbeing, urban sanitation and communicable disease, the role of transport infrastructures and government policy, and the cost implications of ‘unhealthy’ cities etc. To that end, this book examines alternative and radical ways of practicing architecture and the re-imagining of the profession of architecture through a lens of human health.

Item Type: Book Section
Dates:
DateEvent
1 December 2019Published
Uncontrolled Keywords: Architecture, urban design, public health, participatory design, wellbeing
Subjects: CAH13 - architecture, building and planning > CAH13-01 - architecture, building and planning > CAH13-01-01 - architecture
Divisions: Faculty of Arts, Design and Media > College of Architecture
Depositing User: Matthew Jones
Date Deposited: 18 Feb 2020 15:21
Last Modified: 12 Jan 2022 13:21
URI: https://www.open-access.bcu.ac.uk/id/eprint/8920

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