Abstract

The work of landscape architects can contribute to the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals and the associated ‘Leave no one behind’ agenda by creating accessible and health-promoting green spaces (especially goals 3, 10 and 11). To ensure that the design of green space delivers accessibility and intended health outcomes, an evidence-based design process is recommended. This is a challenge, since many landscape architects are not trained in evidence-based design, and leading scholars have called for methods that can help landscape architects work in an evidence-based manner. This paper examines the implementation of a process model for evidence-based health design in landscape architecture. The model comprises four steps: ‘evidence collection’, ‘programming’, ‘designing’, and ‘evaluation’. The paper aims to demonstrate how the programming step can be implemented in the design of a health-promoting nature trail that is to offer people with mobility disabilities improved mental, physical and social health. We demonstrate how the programming step systematizes evidence into design criteria (evidence-based goals) and design solutions (how the design criteria are to be solved in the design). The results of the study are presented as a design ‘Program’, which we hope can serve as an example for landscape architects of how evidence can be translated into design.

Highlights

  • This paper has presented an implementation of the four-step EBHDL process model, focusing on the programming step of the model, as an example of how landscape architects can work with an evidence-based approach to support human health through accessible green spaces

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) has stated that it is vital that green space is designed in a manner that delivers positive health outcomes

  • Evidence-based design processes are recommended as a means of ensuring such positive health outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

The work of architects, landscape architects, planners, and designers can contribute to achieving the United Nations’ (UN) 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Some of the SDGs are easier to achieve by using architecture than others. Making cities sustainable relates to the work of architects, landscape architects, and city planners since it includes ‘safe and affordable housing’, ‘creating green public spaces’, and ‘improving urban planning and management’ [1]. The World Health Organization (WHO) has identified target 7 in SDG 11, “By 2030, provide universal access to safe, inclusive and accessible, green and public spaces, in particular for women and children, older persons and persons with disabilities” [2], as a framework that can help to promote the agenda on the relationship between urban green space and human health

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