Policymaker and Practitioner Perceptions of Parks for Health and Wellbeing: Scoping a Holistic Approach
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Co-produce a list of green space qualities, impact strategies, and policy options.
- Measure green space qualities and the related contextual factors in cities.
- Establish the ‘prevention potential’ of the green space qualities.
- 4.
- How to better define and assess park quality.
- 5.
- How to increase equity in access and use.
- 6.
- How to design appropriate parks for the use of urban communities.
2. Setting the Context: The Health and Wellbeing Benefits of Parks
3. Research Methods
4. Focus Group Approach—Preparatory Activities
4.1. Research Ethics Approval
4.2. Recruitment of Focus Group Participants
- Park policymakers.
- Park providers.
- Public health policymakers.
- Officers associated with park policy, provision, and future trends.
- Park designers.
- Park advocates.
- Private, NGO, and state and local government sectors.
4.3. A Note about Research Participants’ Location
5. Focus Group Approach—Execution
6. Focus Group Approach—Analysis
Coding refers to the systemic labelling of qualitative data by linking of words, phrases or images to distinct tags or codes. Coding allows a data set (…a transcribed interview…) to be broken down into manageable parts to assist with analysis and interpretation.
7. Results of the Focus Group Analysis: Park Quality and Health
7.1. Parks as a Network
It’s important not to think of parks as the green square island in a city with a hard line around it, that sits somehow separate from the city. You know, parks don’t operate in that way; they are very much part of their context.
We are looking at what creates, you know, a high performing open space network. So it’s not only just about one space, but it’s about the collection of spaces that actually make up the built environment.
As we’ve been developing the greener place design guide, we’ve identified a range of performance criteria, and they include accessibility and connectivity. The idea is to have an interconnected network of open space parks of various sizes, which have different performance criteria and quality.
They [parks] don’t all have to serve the same function, and I think that if people have access to a range of open spaces that meet the diverse needs of that community, then that’s great.
We shouldn’t forget our elder citizens, particularly in that health spectrum. We talked about play spaces, which are generally for the younger. But active senior citizen engagement and spaces and connection is terribly important too, especially in an ageing population.
Youth well-being and youth mental health is a resilience challenge—and the importance of connecting youth to green space, which is free, is a really important challenge for us.
[Name] Park is a great example. Not only does it have all the social capital, the coming together of people, but it’s capturing all that stormwater from that park, reusing it, and creating an incredible habitat, which is attracting thousands of birds, rare and endangered species. There is artwork incorporated into that water body. So what that to me really represents is a fantastic, high quality space. It’s got children’s playgrounds and all those other things, community gardens—it shows the range—the environmental, social and economic in terms of what they are saving on water use to keep that park irrigated as well. And the overall water quality benefits of the entire system, because that water is purified before it actually goes up.
7.2. Co-Design with Communities
I think one of the underlying things of this whole discussion is really about the importance of a place-based approach to parks … whether they’re a very small scrappy little park, [or] a big regional park … really making sure that parks respond to the local context, both the local community, the local historical and cultural context, connections to place, and connections to country.
In [our Council], for example, high density is a relatively new thing and so we’re just starting to look at parks as public lounge room spaces, I guess, for people who don’t have that larger space in their homes or yards. In some of our new release areas, the lots are a lot smaller than we’d traditionally see so those open space areas are used like a public backyard and communal space, which is yeah, as I said, historically fairly new for [Name] area. Obviously, there’s a need for that. People need a space to socialise, and for that connection, whether it’s the people they already know or incidental connection with neighbours and connecting with the people who live around them.
I think it’s really important to view that sense of ownership for parks and the local community; and that way, if you involve community in the development, you’re going to involve them to take care of it… I think a sense of community ownership really important.
It’s not just physical form—so it’s not just about the barbecues or bubblers. It’s about the programming and activities, and then how people feel about the space, and how they can connect to it and to each other in that place. Those three things together are what helps create the quality of a public space.
We need to almost shift away from a facilities thinking to a usage thinking…we aren’t just looking for barbecues and toilets. We’re also looking for destination and place and connection to country and all of those other elements.
7.3. Benefits Are Gained in a Myriad of Ways
A couple of things that I wanted to talk [about] is the importance of having active open space. From an active living point of view, from a physical health point of view, we need to be able to go out and interact with the open space. People are happy to travel a little bit further if it means they can go for a really long walk. Like, for example, the [Name} Walk that people actually travel to; that gives them the physical activity benefit. But in terms of the social connectivity or getting the kids out and being active locally, the small parks work.
If we can promote access through active transport like walking or cycling, you know, or even public transport, that would be great.
…another issue within [our Council] is that people commute a long way to work, and they don’t have the time to be spending at destinations that aren’t along their travel routes or part of their daily life. It’s about the incidental activity that we can build into people’s lives, and in terms of new [residential] release areas, it’s things like having shops close to home, so that people don’t have to drive to the big Woolies [supermarket] a suburb over to pack the boot and drive home.
There’s also the role that open space plays in people getting away from crowds and getting away from the feel, that urban feel, especially if they live in high density or a crowded area; and it’s about finding some peace and the mental health benefits that come with that as well, and being in touch with nature rather than other people.
In terms of the more passive open space and the spaces in nature that have been protected from development and design, I think it’s quite important too, obviously for environmental reasons, but also for people’s health and well-being—spaces that aren’t built, not part of the built environment, and are an escape from the built environment for communities and people.
Escaping the busy-ness of everyday life, whether it be with their families or on their own, I think that was a really important thing for people to do at a time when there was a lot of stress and uncertainty in their lives, but it was also a really positive thing for people to be able to do and be able to access those things freely as well.
In terms of social benefits… [the park] is a place where I can go and interact with other people, where my children can meet other children, where my family can interact with many different kinds of other people.
People need a space to socialise, and for that connection—whether it’s the people they already know or incidental connection with neighbours and connecting with the people who live around them.
…we’re seeing here, increasing … pressure from our community to deliver more climate adaptive green space… particularly the inclusion of shade. But use of materials in terms of reflective materials, things like water misting, and those kinds of considerations to make sure that we’re not just delivering open space, but quality open space that’s usable and liveable as well.
It’s another dimension of understanding what these influences are [for increasing dwell time], and particularly in heat stressed suburbs, where even access walking to the local school or the streetscapes or access to natural open space systems are all part of this broader grid… human health and well-being in those spaces, has just really been highlighted by some research … particularly thermal comfort.
8. Discussion
I think that was a really important thing for people to do at a time when there was a lot of stress and uncertainty in their lives, but it was also a really positive thing for people to be able to do and be able to access those things freely as well.
We would never have predicted its role in resilient communities through COVID.
9. Conclusions
You can’t have enough multi-purpose green ways, particularly in established urban areas…to highlight the essential role that open space plays in maintaining and building community resilience, which covers health, equity, vulnerability, personal safety, social cohesion—really important things.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Focus Group Questions and Prompts |
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Theme one: What is park quality? |
QUESTION PROMPTS:
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Theme two: Park quality and health |
QUESTION PROMPTS:
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Theme three: Assessing park quality |
QUESTION PROMPTS:
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Lin, B.B.; Thompson, S.; Mitchell, R.; Astell-Burt, T.; De Leeuw, E.; Jalaludin, B.; Feng, X. Policymaker and Practitioner Perceptions of Parks for Health and Wellbeing: Scoping a Holistic Approach. Sustainability 2023, 15, 5251. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15065251
Lin BB, Thompson S, Mitchell R, Astell-Burt T, De Leeuw E, Jalaludin B, Feng X. Policymaker and Practitioner Perceptions of Parks for Health and Wellbeing: Scoping a Holistic Approach. Sustainability. 2023; 15(6):5251. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15065251
Chicago/Turabian StyleLin, Brenda B., Susan Thompson, Richard Mitchell, Thomas Astell-Burt, Evelyne De Leeuw, Bin Jalaludin, and Xiaoqi Feng. 2023. "Policymaker and Practitioner Perceptions of Parks for Health and Wellbeing: Scoping a Holistic Approach" Sustainability 15, no. 6: 5251. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15065251
APA StyleLin, B. B., Thompson, S., Mitchell, R., Astell-Burt, T., De Leeuw, E., Jalaludin, B., & Feng, X. (2023). Policymaker and Practitioner Perceptions of Parks for Health and Wellbeing: Scoping a Holistic Approach. Sustainability, 15(6), 5251. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15065251