Skip to content Skip to footer

Well+Being: Good Intentions are Not Enough
Gil Penalosa

Key Takeaways

    • Built environment, such as protected lanes, nearby shops, open schoolyards, tree canopy, etc., shapes human behaviour and daily choices.
    • Good intentions, campaigns, policy advice, etc, fail unless the situation is changed to make living healthier an easy choice.
    • Healthier diets, sufficient sleep, social connection, regular contact with nature, and everyday physical activity are the five top priorities that enable healthier outcomes at the neighborhood scale.

Summary

    1. We need cities that are fun. The library, the sidewalks, the parks – everything that is free should be joyful to attract and retain citizens.
    2. Situation modification delivers behaviour change:
      • Well-being is achieved when city design and policy choices remove friction for healthy routines and lifestyles.
      • A few examples of situational modifications include proximity to necessities; safe, slow streets; programmed public spaces; tree equity; and multipurpose uses for communities.
      • Irrespective of the city size, when you start thinking at the neighborhood scale, the same solutions can be applied and scaled.
    3. Examples of strong political will and strategic decisions:
      • Bogota’s Open streets / Ciclovia- an open streets program that grew through repeated programming and rapid cultural change.
      • Paris’s cycling culture – rapid rollout of protected bike lanes during the COVID-19 pandemic after a mayoral directive.
      • Seoul’s Cheonggyecheon Restoration Project – removal of a 5.6-kilometer (3.5-mile) elevated highway built over the buried Cheonggyecheon stream, and creating a new open space.
      • Mexico’s ban on junk food in schools – schools were asked to adapt their kitchens within six months to serve healthier foods and make chips, sodas, and sugary snacks off-limits on campus.
    4. Practical solutions:
      • 30km/h as the maximum speed limit in urban areas
      • 3-30-300 tree rule – park within 300 meters, 30% canopy target in neighborhoods, and a minimum of 3 trees visible from homes.
      • Open schoolyards as a community space after school hours and on weekends
      • Flexible work hours to reduce congestion, better work-life balance, and increase productivity.
      • Noise level limitations in neighborhoods
      • Design cities that work for an eight-year-old and an eight-year-old.

How can Cities apply these learnings?

    1. Aim to plan for neighborhood-level proximity that reduces car trips, increases physical activity, and incentivizes the local economy.
    2. Design an inclusive, connected network of protected lanes that serves all ages and abilities to promote mode-shift to walking and cycling.
    3. Slow streets pilot for residential and school areas.

Ideas for further reading

      1. The 3-30-300 Rule for Urban Forestry and Greener Cities by Cecil Konijnendijk. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/353571108_The_3-30-300_Rule_for_Urban_Forestry_and_Greener_Cities
      2. Best practice in boosting cycling modal share and creating safe, sustainable cities. https://urban-mobility-observatory.transport.ec.europa.eu/resources/case-studies/best-practice-boosting-cycling-modal-share-and-creating-safe-sustainable-cities_en

Ideas for further research

    1. Experiment situation-change: Deploy tactical interventions in a neighborhood and measure change in modal share, physical activity, social contact, etc.
    2. Pilot a school-yard program opening it as a community space after school hours and on weekends, and measure physical activity in the community, social interactions, and elders’ participation in social life.

Leave a comment

0.0/5