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Journal of the Australian Health Promotion Association
RESEARCH FRONT

Healthy places and spaces: the impact of the built environment and active transport on physical activity and population health

Chris Rissel A C and Peter McCue B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Sydney School of Public Health, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.

B Premier’s Council for Active Living, Level 3, 80 William Street, Sydney, NSW 2011, Australia.

C Corresponding author. Email: chris.rissel@sydney.edu.au

Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25(3) 155-156 https://doi.org/10.1071/HE14103
Published: 8 December 2014

This issue of the Journal presents several papers on the impact of the built environment and active transport on physical activity and population health. The suggestion that the way we build our environment can affect our health and how we move about is not a new idea. However, as the world becomes more urbanised, the impact of the built environment is increasingly of concern to more and more people. The majority (54%) of the world’s population now live in an urban context for the first time in history.1

As early as 500 BC, the ancient Greeks designed city grid patterns with a north–south orientation to maximise heating and cooling effects. As most available wood had been used for fuel, solar energy was important. Greek houses were built with south-facing façades that received little to no sun in the summer but full sun in the winter, warming the house. This practice of solar architecture continued with the Romans, but appears to have been forgotten in the design of some modern suburban housing, where houses fill the allotted block and have no eaves at all, thus requiring heating in winter and cooling in summer.

There is evidence throughout history of spaces being designed for people. This practice was well established in the 19th century, when Frederick Olmstead designed Central Park in New York City to be the ‘lungs of the city’ and a critical place for physical activity and recreation. Only recently have planners and civic officials given renewed consideration and awareness to how community design intricacies and urban planning processes can lead to environments that either reduce or exacerbate health inequities.2 In their haste to ‘modernise’, some developing countries are focusing on roads and highways for motorised transport, rather than attending to the lessons from countries where this emphasis is being seriously reconsidered.

We need new leadership in this space, and rethinking of a reliance on private motor vehicles – with health as an integral part of planning. There is a resurgence of interest in healthy places and spaces, and some indications of significant political endorsement in planning circles. For example, New South Wales has invested in a Healthy Built Environment program, and is considering formally including ‘health’ in a substantial update of planning legislation (see Thompson et al.).3 In addition, new theories and approaches are needed, such as a path dependent framework (see Hensley et al.).4

The recent international walking conference in Sydney, ‘Walk21’, gathered ideas and learning about how we can create better spaces for walking. These included examples of tactical urbanism by Mike Lydon, in which creative and popular temporary changes to spaces were embraced and then became permanent.5 There was a reinvigoration of ‘Walktober’ as a potential annual walking promotion event in New South Wales, and a proposed Parramatta Shared Space laneway project design. Local government plays a significant role in creating local spaces that support active travel, and at the conference, 21 local council mayors (and this number is growing) signed the Walk21 International Walking Charter. In addition, there was a focus on children’s mobility, and the launch of the NSW Active Travel Charter for Children,6 which is to be followed by resources for parents and the school community to support active travel.

Population health is not only physical health. It is well known that sterile impersonal environments can have negative effects upon mental health, and conversely that parks and natural environments can have positive mental health outcomes. In this issue of the Journal, Francis et al. found that mental health was strongly influenced by a sense of community and security, as well as an aesthetically pleasing environment.7 The natural environment can be enhanced by adding facilities such as exercise equipment, and Furber et al.8 and Scott et al.9 report on the positive response to this. Sometimes, the addition of items to the environment can have mixed effects, with artificial light in the urban environment adversely affecting sleep in susceptible people (see Grose).10

Areas of considerable research interest include the influence of the built environment on physical activity and active travel. The design of aesthetically pleasing and practical pedestrian and cycling paths has been clearly shown to increase both physical activity and active travel, yet proximity to destinations remains an important influence on active travel (see Zander et al.).11 Distance from the city centre is adversely associated with adequate physical activity, yet if active travel patterns were to improve, there would be considerable health benefits (see Beavis et al.).12

New research is now extending the traditional health benefits of cycling to links with quality of life measures (Crane et al.).13 Planning for travel demand management, including workplace travel planning, will likely further increase active travel (see Petrunoff et al.).14 The ability to reliably measure aspects of our physical environment, such as ‘walkability’, is important for researchers, and the development of tools for this measurement are becoming increasingly available (see Giles-Corti et al.).15



References

[1]  World Health Organisation. Global Health Observatory. www.who.int/gho/urban_health/en/ Last accessed 26/10/2014.

[2]  Ransom MM, Greiner A, Kochtitzky C, Major KS (2011) Pursuing Health Equity: Zoning Codes and Public Health. J Law Med Ethics 39, 94–7.
Pursuing Health Equity: Zoning Codes and Public Health.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | 21309907PubMed |

[3]  Thompson S, Kent J, Lyons C. (2014) Building Partnerships for Healthy Environments: Research, Leadership and Education. Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25, 202–208.

[4]  Hensley M, Mateo-Babiano D, Minnery J (2014) Healthy places, active transport and path dependence: a review of the literature. Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25, 196–201.

[5]  Lydon M, Garcia A. Tactical Urbanism. Washington DC: Island Press, (in press 2015).

[6]  NSW Office of Preventive Health. NSW Active Travel Charter for Children. http://www.preventivehealth.net.au/childrens-active-travel.html. (Last accessed November 5, 2014).

[7]  Francis J, Giles-Corti B, Wood L, Knuiman M (2014) Neighbourhood influences on perceived mental health in Master Planned Estates: a qualitative examination of resident perspectives. Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25, 186–192.

[8]  Furber S, Pomroy H, Grego S, Tavener-Smith K (2014) People’s experiences of using outdoor gym equipment in parks. Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25, 211

[9]  Scott A, Stride V, Neville L, Hua M (2014) Design and promotion of an outdoor gym for older adults: a collaborative project. Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25, 212–214.

[10]  Grose M (2014) Artificial light at night as a population health concern is a neglected aspect of the built environmen. Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25, 193–195.

[11]  Zander A, Rissel C, Rogers K, Bauman A (2014) Active travel to work in NSW: trends over time and the effect of social advantage. Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25, 167–173.

[12]  Beavis M, Moodie M (2014) Incidental physical activity in Melbourne Australia: Health and economic impacts of mode of transport and suburban location. Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25, 174–181.

[13]  Crane M, Rissel C, Standen C, Greaves S (2014) Associations between the frequency of cycling and domains of quality of life. Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25, 182–185.

[14]  Petrunoff N, Rissel C, Wen LM, Bindon J (2014) We need more active travel intervention research – why not travel plans? Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25, 209–210.

[15]  Giles-Corti B, Macaulay G, Middleton N, Boruff N, Bull F, Butterworth I, Badland H, Mavoa S, Roberts R, Christian H (2014) Developing a research and practice tool to measure walkability: A demonstration project. Health Promotion Journal of Australia 25, 160–166.