Healthy Cities, New Technologies and Sustainability: A Collaborative Mapping of Informal Sport Activity in the Public Space of Cities as an Innovative Tool for Understanding City Sport Phenomena
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. State of Play
2.1. Urban Public Space as a Generator of Social Relation and Practising Sport
2.2. The Role of New Technologies When Promoting Sport Activity in the City
3. Methodology
3.1. Phase 0. Construction of the Digital webGIS Platform
- Frontend: Application implemented through the Javascript React libraryand Mapbox Platform (open source) for the creation and management of maps and georeferenced information.
- Backend: Use of the Google Firebase platform, specifically: Firebase Authentication (for user authentication) Cloud Firestore (database for storage of initiatives) and Cloud Storage (for storage of initiative images).
3.2. Phase 1. Collection of Objective Information for its Subsequent Loading on the Digital Platform
- Planimetric consultation of existing sports facilities in public spaces where sports take place, parks and natural areas [53]. Cataloguing urban areas where non-formal and formal sports take place using the information provided by different local authority services through interviews. A committee of experts from different institutional areas was therefore set up. The results of these interviews are registered in Table 1.
- Semi-structured interviews with the management areas of the different neighborhoods or districts (citizen participation process).
3.3. Phase 2. Collection of Subjective Information for its Subsequent Loading on the Digital Platform. Observation and Surveys of Citizens
- Direct observation of the urban spaces with greatest sports activity or interest identified in the prior analysis.
- Creation of observation datasheets for each place, where the observer fills in the information on the zone, along with taking photographs of different activities in different weather and times of the day.
- Surveys on users of the urban space and sportspeople (citizen participation process). The aim of those surveys is focused on checking the prior analysis, in addition to being able to obtain additional information on the attributes and values of those spaces, and information on the state of repair of those spaces and aspects to be improved there. The survey form is included in an attached document.
- Setting up of a committee of agents reporting on the different sports identified; those agents are sports entities or associations and other individual sportspeople who use the urban space for a specific activity from the following: volleyball, surfing, parkour, rowing, running, skateboarding, roller skating, wellness, free-style bicycles, cycling and swimming. This committee allows greater knowledge to be obtained on informal sports activity as per the different sports.
- An online survey where information is obtained from the users of the public space for sports. Information is obtained on their preferences, opinions and suggestions regarding those spaces. The survey collects information about the respondents (sex, age and country of origin) as well as information regarding their sports practice habits in the urban space, their preferences, opinions and demands regarding infrastructure requirements and conditions of urban space. From this link the online survey carried out can be accessed: online survey.
3.4. Phase 4. COLLABORATIVE MAPPING. Loading of Information on the Digital Platform and Simultaneous Dissemination of the Platform on Social Networks and Local Media to Involve Citizens in the Process of Mapping Sports Information in the City
3.5. Case Study: City of Malaga
4. Discussion and Results
4.1. Tool to Recognize Health Status. Methodology to Map the Sport Activity in the City
4.2. Healthy Neighborhoods. Identificación of Areas of Concentration of Informal Sports Activity
4.3. Urban Design and Health. Attributes and Qualities of the Urban Space that Foster Sport Activiy
- Marine environment: Spaces close to the sea are conducive for the majority of sports.
- Natural environment: they are attractive zones for physical exercise as their environmental quality is high.
- Large parks: as they are natural, accessible and spacious spaces within the consolidated city.
- Linear and wide routes: It can be seen that sportspeople chose a linear route for their sport given that it is therefore easy to set a route.
- Other urban environments called “non places”: this term is used to refer to urban spaces with no use or little use, and which certain social groups or urban tribes use for recreational activity, thus giving those places a new identity, as is the case of the course of the River Guadalmedina.
4.4. New Trends and Types of Sports
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reporting Agents | |||||
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Urban Public Space * | Malaga Town Planning Department and Urban Environment Observatory | Malaga City Council (Sports Area) | Blanquerna Univ. Research | Reporting Agents for Each Sports Type | Sports Applications (Straba and Endomondo) |
1. Natural channels (Guadalhorce riverestuary) | x | x | x | ||
2. Big parks and green areas (Maria Luisa Park) | x | ||||
3. Big parks and green areas (Litoral Park) | x | ||||
4. Big parks and green areas (Oeste Park) | x | x | x | ||
5. Big parks and green areas (Huelin Park) | x | x | x | x | x |
6. Seafront (Huelin waterfront) | x | x | x | x | |
7. Seafront (La Misericordia waterfront) | x | x | x | x | |
8. Sefront (Torre Mónica waterfront) | x | x | x | ||
9. Channeled channels near areas of centrality (River Guadalmedina estuary) | x | x | x | ||
10. Squares near áreas of centrality La Marina Square | x | x | x | ||
11. Seafront (La Malagueta waterfront) | x | x | x | x | x |
12. Seafront (Baños del Carmen waterfront) | x | x | x | x | |
13. Seafront (Pedregalejo waterfront) | x | x | x | x | |
14. Seafront (El Palo waterfront) | x | x | |||
15. Seafront (El Dedo waterfront) | x | x | |||
16. Big parks and green areas (El Morlaco Park) | x | x | |||
17. Big parks and green areas (Montes de Málaga natural park). | x | x | x | ||
18. Teatinos area ** |
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Cornax-Martín, M.; Nebot-Gómez de Salazar, N.; Rosa-Jiménez, C.; Luque-Gil, A. Healthy Cities, New Technologies and Sustainability: A Collaborative Mapping of Informal Sport Activity in the Public Space of Cities as an Innovative Tool for Understanding City Sport Phenomena. Sustainability 2020, 12, 8176. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12198176
Cornax-Martín M, Nebot-Gómez de Salazar N, Rosa-Jiménez C, Luque-Gil A. Healthy Cities, New Technologies and Sustainability: A Collaborative Mapping of Informal Sport Activity in the Public Space of Cities as an Innovative Tool for Understanding City Sport Phenomena. Sustainability. 2020; 12(19):8176. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12198176
Chicago/Turabian StyleCornax-Martín, Marta, Nuria Nebot-Gómez de Salazar, Carlos Rosa-Jiménez, and Ana Luque-Gil. 2020. "Healthy Cities, New Technologies and Sustainability: A Collaborative Mapping of Informal Sport Activity in the Public Space of Cities as an Innovative Tool for Understanding City Sport Phenomena" Sustainability 12, no. 19: 8176. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12198176
APA StyleCornax-Martín, M., Nebot-Gómez de Salazar, N., Rosa-Jiménez, C., & Luque-Gil, A. (2020). Healthy Cities, New Technologies and Sustainability: A Collaborative Mapping of Informal Sport Activity in the Public Space of Cities as an Innovative Tool for Understanding City Sport Phenomena. Sustainability, 12(19), 8176. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12198176