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Id : 2741

Author :
Shan W.; Xiu C.; Meng Y.

Title


How to Design Greenway on Urban Land Utilization: Linking Place Preference, Perceived Health Benefit, and Environmental Perception

Reference :


Shan W.; Xiu C.; Meng Y. How to Design Greenway on Urban Land Utilization: Linking Place Preference, Perceived Health Benefit, and Environmental Perception,International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19 20

Link to article https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85140801417&doi=10.3390%2fijerph192013640&partnerID=40&md5=be89d1869e81aba45bdfa493b256ca26
Abstract The rapid urbanization and over-crowded urban environment have caused a serious public health crisis. Numerous studies have found that public green spaces can benefit human health and well-being. Therefore, a short supply or an inappropriate planning of public green spaces would exaggerate the health crisis. For all these reasons, how to create health-promoting greenways in urban areas becomes a critical and pressing challenge for urban sustainability. To address this challenge, we conducted a photograph-survey study of a greenway to examine the relationship between place preference, perceived health benefit, and environmental perception. Through a set of linear regression analysis, we found that: place preference is significantly and positively associated with six specific perceptions, including relaxation when walking alone, cheering of one’s mood, being away from daily life, traffic safety, recovery from stress, and mental fascination. Furthermore, we identified the important environmental perception elements that have significant positive or negative associations with each identified perception; these were carefully planned. This study is an initial effort to examine a critical urban land-use issue: appropriate planning of greenways in the city to promote public health and well-being. The research findings provide strong and clear guidance on planning strategies for urban greenways and shed light on future studies. © 2022 by the authors.



Results:


                            Impact                            

                   Certainity                   

Health and Wellbeing

0.9675
Urban and Territorial Renovation 0.0078
Peoples Engagement and Participation 0.0052
Note: Due to lack of computing power, results have been previously created and saved in database