Don’t underestimate the importance of parks – living near a green space has a more sustained positive effect on people’s mental wellbeing than a lottery win, according to new research from the European Centre for Environment and Human Health at the University of Exeter.
“People do all sorts of things to make themselves happier: they strive for promotions and pay rises, they even get married. But the trouble with all those things is that within six months to a year, they’re back to their original baseline levels of wellbeing,” says the report’s co-author, Matthew White. Living near green space gives a more sustainable sense of wellbeing.
This is because of humans’ innate need for nature, according to Dr William Bird, founder of Intelligent Health and co-editor of the Oxford Textbook of Nature and Public Health, which explores the science behind nature’s effect on people. “People need nature. An absence of it causes people to be stressed which then leads to inflammation of the brain, which makes the body feel under attack and is the cause of all long term Western diseases,” he says. “Nature has a physical impact on us to reduce stress: blood pressure drops, there are changes in the brain. Contact with the earth and soil is very therapeutic and people want that connection.”
UK government body Public Health England is using research from advisor Natural England to help local government identify priorities for greening communities. The studies show that visits to green spaces can boost self esteem, benefit those suffering from dementia and make people feel calm, relaxed, refreshed and revitalised. Those living in cities, without access to green space, show more signs of depression and anxiety.
Natural England’s research also shows that an increasing number of people are using the outdoors at least once a week for health and exercise. And 44 per cent make at least one leisure visit a week to the outdoors, compared to 34 per cent in 2009.
Birmingham City Council in the UK is working with Dr William Bird to calculate how many people use its parks for health and fitness, in order to get funds from the National Health Service towards the upkeep of parks and also evidence the value of parks to state their case when it comes to budgets.
Card readers have been installed in some of the city’s parks, allowing people to swipe if they have used them for exercise. The council is looking into other ways of capturing usage, such as an app, or introducing a reward scheme to incentivise people to tell them if they have been to the park.
Does this mean that urban planners and developers will start to take more notice of our need for green spaces and the research backing up its value? Interestingly, the artist Damien Hirst has submitted plans for a 750-home development in Ilfracombe, Devon, UK, which includes open space and parkland among its community facilities.
The US is further ahead of the UK; there the trend for community supported agriculture is gathering pace. The Urban Land Institute estimates there are now around 200 operations in progress where developers have added a farm, community garden, orchard and/or edible park to developments in order to attract buyers, increase home values and nurture a feeling of community.
The Bucking Horse development in Fort Collins, Colorado is one example. It has 1,000 homes, a 3.6 acre community supported agriculture farm, a plaza with a farmers’ market and an educational centre where homeowners can take canning classes. The public toilets are in an old chicken coop, along with a few chickens. Values of existing homes have jumped 25 per cent since construction began on the agricultural amenities.
If Caribbean leisure development Kittitian Hills on the island of St Kitts is anything to go by, we can expect to see more leisure developments fostering the growing interest in community agriculture. This resort, which features a boutique hotel, private villas and restaurants, will open an edible golf course in the summer, believed to be the first in the world.
“The largest environmental impact of a normal golf course is the acreage wasted to accommodate the course,” says developer, Val Kempadoo. “The course is built into a farm, so any areas which aren’t tee boxes, greens or fairways are cultivated, planted and harvested, eliminating the wasted space of a normal golf course.”
The course is grown and maintained organically and the food harvested will be used for the restaurants. Pick me signs will give golfers the opportunity to sample produce and caddies will explain the different produce being grown. The hotel is designing programmes to allow guests to participate in the planting, harvesting and propagation of tropical fruits and vegetables.
As the pressure on space in our cities increases, we can expect to see more creativity and increased use of technology in order to bring disused or redundant spaces into public use.
This is partly thanks to the ongoing influence of New York’s High Line (see LM 2012 Q1) which transformed an abandoned 1930s elevated railway into a linear park. This project was a game changer, sparking thinking across the world about how to revitalise forgotten spaces and providing the inspiration for the High Line for London competition last year.
In the future, more is likely to be made of smaller areas of land, enlisting the help of the community to make them into usable spaces. Pocket parks are part of the Mayor of London’s Great Outdoors programme to improve streets, squares, parks, canal and riverside spaces to provide oases of calm from the hustle and bustle of the city. The programme is offering grants of between £5,000 and £20,000 to communities who want to create their own pocket parks. So far 60 projects have been offered funding.
The parks of the future might look different from the ones we’re used to, but they’ll hopefully continue to play a vital role in our communities.