Abstract

The demographic aging and the evolution of lifestyles require new strategies to promote the well-being and active aging of elderly. Active aging depends on many factors: some of these are related to objective data such as physical environment, others are personal elements; it is important to improve environmental physical factors to encourage personal attitudes to the green spaces in use. To design a small sustainable restorative green space in Milan, Italy, restorative garden design criteria are summarized in the first section of the paper and both social and environmental sustainability are considered. The methodology section describes the co-design process and how it was applied to include different older user groups in the design of the area. In the results section authors apply a taxonomy based on the four properties of restorative settings according to the Attention Restoration Theory by Kaplan (compatibility, being away, extent, fascination): this provides a unified system to classify users’ expectations and to describe the final project. The proposed co-design process combines social and environmental sustainability, as it provides designers an insight about the user’s experience in nature. Such information can be fruitfully integrated with professional competences about comfort aspects and environmental protection in order to improve the whole design project.

Highlights

  • The Italian elderly population was 20.1% in 2007, 22.8% in 2019, and it is projected to be 24.2% by 2025 [1]

  • The methodology proposes focus group activities including the use of Attention Restoration Theory principles and the results show the project that derives from this process

  • We first analyze inputs by focus group activities to obtain specific information about the needs of local elderly and committed stakeholders and, subsequently, we apply these elderly garden design criteria tailored to an Italian context to realize a garden able to improve benefits for future older users

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Summary

Introduction

The Italian elderly population (aged 65 and over) was 20.1% in 2007, 22.8% in 2019, and it is projected to be 24.2% by 2025 [1]. Cultural, and political changes, elderly people have higher degrees of education, better health, and higher incomes. These elements enable seniors to have more time for leisure, recreational, and learning activities [3]. As a result, their expectations for outdoor spaces are changing and they concern “active aging”. According to the World Health Organization (WHO) [4], active aging depends on many factors: some of these are objectives such as physical environment, health and social services, economic conditions, climate; others are personal as—for example—behavior, cultural attitude, and social involvement [5]. It is important to improve the environmental physical factors to encourage personal attitudes towards green space use

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