Abstract

The urban environment is a product of many tangible and intangible factors for communities, involving activities, spaces, and users of different age groups. Stakeholder consultation has become an essential part of envisaging any urban space. In general practice, mostly adults’ opinions and suggestions are taken into account, and children are sidelined, even if the issues are related to children. Children are an integral part of the present urbanizing world and are some of its most sensitive and affected users. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child recognizes three P’s: provision, protection, and participation. The third, participation, is a crucial dimension of creating a healthier environment, but it has largely been neglected. The drawing technique is among the methods to gather information directly through the children’s participatory approach. It has been observed that children prefer to express themselves by drawing rather than answering questions and find it easy and enjoyable. This research incorporates drawing as a methodological tool for identifying children’s expectations and understanding their preferences about their ideal neighborhood park. A total of 80 children aged between 6 and 15 years from planned zones of Lucknow city were selected for the research. The results derived from the content and co-relation data analysis techniques highlight that children emphasized physical, perceptional, cognitive, emotional, and social parameters for developing a child-friendly environment in parks and open spaces.

Highlights

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations

  • Urbanization can be defined as the increase in economic activities due to an increase in the population of the urban area

  • The objectives of the study were as follows: (1) to understand children and their relationships with the surrounding environment; (2) to investigate the child-friendly environment; (3) to identify a suitable method to comprehend the views of children by involving them in the research; (4) to explore children’s perspectives on developing a child-friendly environment in the parks and open spaces of planned neighborhoods

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Summary

Introduction

Attracting development and urban transformation [4,5] This development may not necessarily be related to the needs of the residents, but rather is largely driven by the interests of private builders/developers [6]. The life of the residents of these overpopulated cities has become ‘modern life’, with imbalances in their financial stability, income levels, and everlasting demands. This has generated inequality between the residents of various income groups as well as different age groups [3]

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