1st Edition

Recipes for Urban Happiness Design for Community Well-being

By Jenny Donovan Copyright 2024
    304 Pages 108 Color Illustrations
    by Routledge

    304 Pages 108 Color Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The experiences we enjoy, endure, or miss out on are influenced by what our surroundings allow and invite us to do. Just like our food diet, our experience diet influences our health and so our chances of finding happiness and fulfilling our potential. A healthy experience diet offers inspiration, reassurance, delight, and play. It nurtures physical, cognitive, and emotional health, builds resilience, and fosters confidence and self-esteem. An unhealthy experience diet lacks these things and consigns people to lives diminished in quantity and quality. Recipes for Urban Happiness offers an innovative way of looking at the relationship between people and place and redefines what good urban design is. The book outlines what designers and non-designers can do to create urban places where nurturing behaviours are both possible and preferable. Recipes for Urban Happiness will be relevant to public health, community development, and design practitioners, as well as students and academics.

    1. Introduction  2. The philosophy behind this book  3. Human needs  4. Our experience diet and experience menu  5. Our motivational compass  6. Needs fulfilling experiences  7. Feeling secure  8. Moving  9. Belonging and connecting  10. Fun and expression  11. Hoping  12. Experiencing nature and green space  13. Understanding and awareness  14. Downstream vital experiences  15. Needs denying experiences  16. Challenges in balancing experience diets  17. Changing the menu  18. Recipes for a nurturing experience diet  19. Emotional capital(ism)  20. Epilogue

    Biography

    Jenny Donovan is the Program Manager-Regional Planning at the Cradle Coast Authority in Tasmania. Her experience spans urban and landscape design, social and environmental planning, community development and neighbourhood renewal in Australia, Afghanistan, the UK, Palestine, Ireland, Ethiopia, Montenegro, Kosovo and Sri Lanka.

    "The study and practical application of Urban Design now reaches beyond codebooks and illustrations of successful (and unsuccessful) projects for urban quarters, whole towns and city regions. The need to make places more equitable, healthy, and supportive of local economic development requires a deeper understanding of the perspectives and needs of all those who will experience that place. Here, Jenny Donovan gives deeper guidance to all - the professional designer, the citizens, and their politicians – quarrying her experience of the moral and economic imperative to create places that nurture rather than diminish. The outlining of good and bad ‘experience diets’ provides the necessarily broad net for catching the breadth of issues to be considered. Donovan concedes that ‘effective healthcare, justice and educational systems and a fair housing system are self-evidently also essential prerequisites’ for making good places. But do not be deceived by this – her illustrations and case study references are international and draw upon her first-hand experience in troubled urban environments such as Afghanistan. Her work with UN-Habitat has provided a perspective of unique span, great humanity and wisdom."

    David Lock, CBE MRTPI, Founder of David Lock Associates planners and urban design consultants (Milton Keynes and Melbourne, Australia); former Chief Planning Adviser to the Department of the Environment (UK); and Ebenezer Howard Medallist 2023

    "In a rapidly changing and often unpredictable world, the issues of climate change, demographic change, the rise in non-communicable diseases and a diminishing stock of resources demand our urgent attention and action. As global populations increasingly gather in towns and cities, it is apparent that for many of us, our urban surroundings are ill-equipped to help us rise to those challenges. As this book reminds us, if we are to meet these challenges, we must understand how our surroundings help us meet our needs, protect and enhance the nurturing influences and mitigate against the toxic. This book adds to this critical discussion by reminding us of the importance of designing for our fundamental biological and psychological needs. It focuses on the overlap between the built, social and administrative environment and invites us all to do our bit. It seeks to point to how we can create built and social surroundings that are both quantitively adequate and qualitatively helpful, freeing us from the shackles of fear and inviting us all to share and enjoy our surroundings. Fundamentally, it is a book that offers hope and shows how to harness it and manifest it into built form."

    Sheree Vertigan, AM, CEO, Chairperson and Director of the Cradle Coast Authority (Tasmania), member of the University of Tasmania Council