1st Edition

Landscape, Well-Being and Environment

Edited By Richard Coles, Zoe Millman Copyright 2013
    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    Well-being is now firmly established as an overarching theme of key concern to all professionals that work, manage or design the environment. However, well-being is a complex multi-dimensional issue rooted in the ways that we encounter, perceive and interpret the environment. No single discipline can claim to have sufficient knowledge to fully explain the types of interactions that occur, therefore there is a need to draw together a wide range of professions who are exploring the consequences of their actions upon the well-being of individuals and communities.

    This edited work addresses the above, consisting of a collection of studies which embrace different aspects of environment, landscape and well-being to consider current approaches to well-being research and practice that fall outside the traditional concepts of well-being as part of medical research, making links with architecture, landscape design, environmental perception, social interaction and environmental sustainability.

    The contributors originally presented at the international conference, ‘Well-Being 2011’ jointly hosted by Birmingham City University and the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA); the chapters have been developed to present a coherent series of themes reviewing a wide range of literature, presenting case studies appropriate to diverse audiences.

     

    Introduction 1. Exploring the Potential for a 'Double Dividend': living well and living greener Louise Reid and Colin Hunter  2. Modelling Well-being and the Relationship Between Individuals and Their Environments Sara Warber, Katherine Irvine, Patrick Devine-Wright and Kevin Gaston  3. Synchronising Self and City: an everyday aesthetic for walking Fiona Bannon  4. Towards a Landscape of Well-Being: the role of landscape and perceptions of place in human well-being Lindsay Sowman  5. Interactive Urban Landscapes for Well-being and Sustainability Janice Astbury  6. The Contribution of Greenery in Multifamily Houses as a Factor of Well-being Irene Yerro Vela  7. Third Places For the Third Age: the contribution of playable space to the well-being of older people Benedict Spencer, Katie Williams, Lamine Mahdjoubi and Rachel Sara  8. Kids in the City: differing perceptions of one neighbourhood in Aotearoa, New Zealand Penelope Carroll, Lanuola Asiasiga, Nicola Tava’e and Karen Witten  9. Culture’s Place in Well-Being: Measuring Museum Well-being Interventions Erica Ander, Linda Thomson and Helen Chatterjee  10. Using Woodlands to Improve Individual and Community Well-being  Liz O’Brien and Jake Morris  11. Children as Explorers: revealing children’s views on well-being in intensifying urban environments Christina Ergler and Robin Kearns  12. Landscape, Well-being and Environment Richard Coles and Zoë Millman

    Biography

    Richard Coles is Professor of Urban Landscape and Environmental Interaction, with a background in forestry and issues relating to urban greening. He has a particular interest in examining how individuals perceive the landscape and has developed a range of theoretical perspectives which model user/environment interaction and from which the current emphasis on well-being stems. His initial training in biological sciences and current work within a design school of architecture allows him to adopt a unique stance to investigation and where he has received grant funding from the UK research councils and the EU. With Zoë Millman he has developed a range of well-being initiatives which target the landscape, walking, memory, and cultural engagement.

    Zoë Millman is a post-doctoral researcher at Birmingham Institute of Art & Design, with a background in museums and the history of art and architecture. She was awarded her PhD, ‘Landscape narratives and the construction of meaning in the contemporary urban canal-scape’ in 2012 (Birmingham City University / British Waterways). Her current research relates to how we perceive, remember, give meaning to and express our understanding of the landscape. Zoë’s recent work has used creative research methods to investigate landscape perceptions, identities and well-being in partnership with community groups and national organisations.