Healthy Design and Urban Planning Strategies, Actions, and Policy to Achieve Salutogenic Cities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
3. Purpose
4. The Key Strategic Objectives
4.1. Climate Change and Management of Adverse Weather Events
- ➢
- to provide updated guidelines and strategies about “heat-health action plans”, referring to the experience acquired in different countries [20];
- ➢
- to supply better link alerts to effective communication and intervention strategies to reduce heat-related mortality;
- ➢
- to improve mitigation tools against the impact of soil dusts through the introduction or preservation of green plants and woods;
- ➢
- to promote actions to mitigate these risks that must include addressing food access vulnerabilities through ongoing city-wide strategies and integrating food access into the city’s emergency response planning with a management of the “last mile” of food distribution with the development of food resilience action plans for vulnerable areas [30];
- ➢
- to tackle the root causes of climate change, understand the public health co-benefits of several actions with a valorization of healthy environments, and advocate health-related developments is vital in order to reduce the burden of disease and promote population health.
4.2. Land Consumption, Sprawl, and Shrinking Cities
- ➢
- to underline that effective policymaking requires a reliable understanding of the state of the environment and the present rates of environmental change. The objectives of environmental monitoring are to document environmental conditions and to detect and better understand changes;
- ➢
- to elaborate on the high sensitivity and specificity sprawl index that can greatly help land-use planners to critically assess projected plans, and control urban sprawl and its negative consequences. Measuring only the extent of built-up areas is not sufficient to reveal the full extent of these patterns;
- ➢
- to consider a sprawl index that combines several socio-economic variables, that is, those related to transport infrastructure (road density and railway density), demography (population density and age structure), the economic situation (gross domestic product and employment ratio), governmental effectiveness, and changes in lifestyle (e.g., household size and car ownership), which are influential drivers of urban sprawl.
- ➢
- to validate a tailored sprawl index that has to be coupled with emission reduction strategies including promotion of active transportation (i.e., vehicles, fuels, vehicle miles traveled) to realize exposure reductions across the entire population;
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- to implement a scheduled monitoring of urban sprawl in European environmental legislation, which will be useful to design health-promoting public green spaces in the urban environment that have the potential to be health-promoting in multiple dimensions (e.g., increasing physical activity, decreasing exposure to air pollution, and improving mental health).
4.3. Tactical Urbanism and Urban Resilience
- ➢
- to move from a tactical approach, focused on the immediate reaction to the event, to a strategic one, focused on long-term management;
- ➢
- to improve disaster preparation to ensure an effective first response, and to implement “build back better” practices in recovery, rehabilitation, and reconstruction [38];
- ➢
- to improve resilience of health infrastructure, cultural heritage, and work-places [38];
- ➢
- to remove imminent health risks caused by poor living conditions and inaccessibility to basic services. It allows residents to think beyond basic vulnerabilities and start developing coping strategies for potential disturbances [39];
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- to promote social initiatives aimed at triggering and accompanying a real innovation process of conventional policies;
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- to raise awareness among policy makers in generating a differentiation between plan making and plan implementation;
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- to encourage training opportunities for designers, aimed at acquiring the skills to deal with the existing tension between the need to involve the inhabitants in the processes of a rethinking of the spaces and the need to obtain solutions with formal quality.
4.4. Urban Comfort, Safety, and Security Perception
- ➢
- to conduct environmental audits of public spaces that are commonly identified as unsafe, followed by community generated programs to improve the appearance of neighborhoods [44];
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- to design neighborhood strategies to enhance community cohesion;
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- to promote community justice initiatives to improve responsibility for behavior in offenders and enhance victim satisfaction with the justice system;
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- to discourage behavior that triggers fear utilizing ‘alcohol-free zones’ and other strategies;
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- to take into consideration strategies that encourage women to report violence and harassment and to access support services;
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- to increase public awareness of any reduction in crime rates or in risk factors associated with fear of crime;
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- to increase the role of police as purveyors of reassurance toward the messages of fear of politics and the media;
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- to design lots, streets, and houses to encourage interaction between neighbors.
4.5. Strengths and Weaknesses of Urban Green Areas and Infrastructures
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- to design and implement proper maintenance of green areas;
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- to choose, in the green areas projects, the essences that must take into account the possible impact on the population and habitat (e.g., plants with greater capacity to absorb CO2 [49], avoiding species that release known allergens and allergic parasites and species that produce large quantities of volatile isoprenoids);
- ➢
- to increase the safety perception of the green spaces both in terms of use and equipment and social security (e.g., through proper artificial lighting and integration of services);
- ➢
- to develop strategies that ensure accessibility to all users, both for reachability (e.g., proximity of green areas, visibility of accesses, etc.) and usability (e.g., availability of routes, physical usability of pedestrian routes in relation to the different types of user, etc.);
- ➢
- to utilize equipment and street furniture in conformity with the requisites of usability, pleasure, and quality over time;
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- to consider strategies that encourage the involvement of the local community in the design of green areas.
4.6. Urban Solid Waste Management
- ➢
- to involve the population in collective and attentive ways that guarantee a high degree of supervision over the correctness of the differentiated waste collection;
- ➢
- to program innovative digital and smart devices, such as a smartphone application, capable of facilitating differentiated waste collection and making citizens active participants in the processes of reporting anomalous situations, thus obtaining a capillary control over the whole city. Moreover, the complete automation of sorting operations, through an optical reader installed in the collection stations, saves time and increases the efficiency of the system;
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- to disseminate "returnable" practice as in Milan and Stockholm, which allow an immediate and significant reduction of waste;
- ➢
- to replace regular bins with smart bins, which could allow a careful and continuous monitoring of waste collection, especially in public spaces, which are neglected on numerous occasions.
- ➢
- to increase pneumatic networks like the “Automated Vacuum Waste Collection System” (Oslo and Stockholm), which replace garbage trucks (pollutant emissions and road congestion would be reduced) and the regular garbage collections, ensuring a safe and protected provision to the specialized centers. The limited size necessary for the waste disposal columns allows for their integration with the urban furniture, respecting the aesthetic perception of the places.
4.7. Housing Emergencies in Relation to Socio-Economic and Environmental Changes
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- to update the building regulations, and to coordinate them with the sanitary ones in general, and in particular with those regarding housing;
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- to find a clear and univocal expression for the hygienic requirements of buildings at the local level, surpassing the dualism between municipal building regulations and local hygiene regulations, and referring to a territory wider than the municipal one;
- ➢
- when selecting sites for temporary housing, it is essential to consider safe water supply; sufficient surface area; autonomous thermo-energy systems; natural drainage; psycho-social, economic, physical, and political security [60]; access to communication routes; safe food supply; possibility of returning to their homes; ownership of the land; future enlargement possibility;
- ➢
- minimum hygienic requirements for the population must be the following: proper disposal of waste and wastewater; safe water supply [61,62,63,64]; protection against the vectors of infectious diseases; avoiding overcrowding; ensuring a correct indoor micro-climate; limiting exposure to fine and coarse powders, fungal spores, toxic and radioactive materials, and mineral fibers [65,66]; minimizing the psycho-social aspects of relocation;
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- only temporarily can the recommendations of the UN Refugee Agency (UNCHR) in terms of building planning requirements be applied. These are as follows: area/person (30 sq.m.); covered space/person (3.5 sq.m.); no. of people/water point (250); no. of people/latrines (20); distance from the water point (150 m at most); distance from water point to latrines (30 m); point to light fire (75 every 300 m); distance between two houses (2 m at least).
4.8. Energy Aspects and Environmental Planning at Urban Scale
- ➢
- to minimize the buildings’ energy demand, starting from a correct study of the roads and block orientation regarding the sun and dominant winds;
- ➢
- to maximize the efficiency of energy conversion technologies;
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- to optimize the water cycle by correctly monitoring a closed cycle (collection, sedimentation, storage, and delivery systems) and promoting sustainable urban drainage systems (green roofs, porous pavements, water squares, rain gardens, etc.);
- ➢
- to control the thermal properties of urban surfaces, with particular reference to heat storage and solar radiation reflection;
- ➢
- to guarantee evapotranspiration through green areas;
- ➢
- to properly design the urban air flows and wind paths (urban canyon geometry and wind penetration in the built area) using breezeway, low-rise buildings and linear parks. In the European climate, it will be important to limit urban winter ventilation and to encourage summer ventilation.
4.9. Socio-Assistance and Welfare Network at an Urban Scale: Importance of a Rational and Widespread System
- ➢
- to improve communication with the neighborhoods, in particular regarding the location and times of services, particularly those of primary care;
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- to make the structures recognizable [75] and pleasing in appearance, both in internal and external spaces;
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- to provide interactive facilities with the surrounding urban context, in particular regarding the most socially disadvantaged neighborhoods;
- ➢
- to institutionalize the mechanisms for assessing possible spatial or aspatial barriers to access, in an improving perspective, especially in the phases of land and urban planning;
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4.10. New Forms of Living, Conscious of Co-Participation Models and Aware of Sharing Quality Objectives
- ➢
- to define housing standards that guarantee energy efficiency, healthiness, and livability;
- ➢
- to focus on the implementation of effective and lasting social housing interventions through the optimization of the high quality/low cost ratio and high living comfort;
- ➢
- to improve the housing condition, also intervening in the relational dimension of the tenants;
- ➢
- to promote the experimentation of new or renewed forms of living, in which the inhabitants are called to participate actively in the construction of a sustainable community;
- ➢
- to encourage housing projects that, thanks to the presence of particular services (housing assistance for elderly and disabled, babysitting, etc.), are able to accommodate categories of users who are not entirely self-sufficient or need assistance;
- ➢
- to encourage housing projects focused on the direct and active involvement of residents both in the design and construction phase, and in the maintenance phase, such as self-construction and cohousing projects;
- ➢
- to promote education for space-sharing and co-management of services, with a view of socializing and saving money.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Strategies for Diseases Prevention and Health Promotion in Urban Areas | |
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Healthy Design and Urban Planning Strategies, Actions, and Policy |
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Environmental and social sustainability |
1. Land consumption, sprawl, and shrinking cities; |
2. Urban solid waste management; |
3. Energy aspects and environmental planning at an urban scale; |
4. Socio-assistance and welfare network at an urban scale: importance of a rational and widespread system. |
Adaptation to climatic changes |
5. Climate change and management of adverse weather events; |
6. Tactical urbanism and urban resilience; |
7. Housing emergencies in relation to socio-economic and environmental changes. |
New responses to the population’s needs |
8. New forms of living, conscious of co-participation models and aware of sharing quality objectives. |
9. Urban comfort, safety, and security perception; |
10. Strengths and weaknesses of urban green areas and infrastructures. |
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Share and Cite
Capolongo, S.; Rebecchi, A.; Dettori, M.; Appolloni, L.; Azara, A.; Buffoli, M.; Capasso, L.; Casuccio, A.; Oliveri Conti, G.; D’Amico, A.; et al. Healthy Design and Urban Planning Strategies, Actions, and Policy to Achieve Salutogenic Cities. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 2698. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15122698
Capolongo S, Rebecchi A, Dettori M, Appolloni L, Azara A, Buffoli M, Capasso L, Casuccio A, Oliveri Conti G, D’Amico A, et al. Healthy Design and Urban Planning Strategies, Actions, and Policy to Achieve Salutogenic Cities. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2018; 15(12):2698. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15122698
Chicago/Turabian StyleCapolongo, Stefano, Andrea Rebecchi, Marco Dettori, Letizia Appolloni, Antonio Azara, Maddalena Buffoli, Lorenzo Capasso, Alessandra Casuccio, Gea Oliveri Conti, Alessandro D’Amico, and et al. 2018. "Healthy Design and Urban Planning Strategies, Actions, and Policy to Achieve Salutogenic Cities" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 15, no. 12: 2698. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15122698
APA StyleCapolongo, S., Rebecchi, A., Dettori, M., Appolloni, L., Azara, A., Buffoli, M., Capasso, L., Casuccio, A., Oliveri Conti, G., D’Amico, A., Ferrante, M., Moscato, U., Oberti, I., Paglione, L., Restivo, V., & D’Alessandro, D. (2018). Healthy Design and Urban Planning Strategies, Actions, and Policy to Achieve Salutogenic Cities. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 15(12), 2698. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15122698