Healthy community design
Healthy community design is planning and designing communities that make it easier for people to live healthy lives. Healthy community design offers important benefits:
- Decreases dependence on the automobile by building homes, businesses, schools, churches and parks closer to each other so that people can more easily walk or bike between them.
- Provides opportunities for people to be physically active and socially engaged as part of their daily routine, improving the physical and mental health of its citizens.
- Allows persons, if they choose, to age in place and remain all their lives in a community that reflects their changing lifestyles and changing physical capabilities.
Health benefits
Healthy places are those designed and built to improve the quality of life for all people who live, work, learn, and play within their borders—where every person is free to make choices amid a variety of healthy, available, accessible, and affordable options.
Healthy community design can provide many advantages:
- Promote physical activity
- Promote a diet free of additives, preservatives, and pesticides
- Improve air quality
- Lower risk of injuries
- Increase social connection and sense of community
- Reduce contributions to climate change
Principles
- Encourage mixed land use and greater land density to shorten distances between homes, workplaces, schools and recreation so people can walk or bike more easily to them.
- Provide good mass transit to reduce the dependence upon automobiles. Build good pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure, including sidewalks and bike paths that are safely removed from automobile traffic as well as good right of way laws and clear, easy-to-follow signage.
- Ensure affordable housing is available for people of all income levels. *Create community centers where people can gather and mingle as part of their daily activities.
- Offer access to green space and parks.
References
Fact Sheet: Healthy Community Design. June 2008. National Center for Environmental Health: Division of Emergency and Environmental Health Services. 15 July 2009. <http://www.cdc.gov/healthyplaces/factsheets/CS_124788HealthyCommunityDesignFact%20Sheet.pdf>.
External links
- Healthy Community Design Initiative (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
- Active Living by Design
- Healthy Communities by Design
- Project for Livable Communities
- LEED for Neighborhood Development
- Congress for New Urbanism
See also
- Complete Communities
- Smart growth
- Transit-oriented development
- Health impact assessment
- Active Living by Design
- Complete streets
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