Leaders And Planners Urged To Build Health-Centred Cities In New Study

Leaders And Planners Urged To Build Health-Centred Cities In New Study

1 minute, 48 seconds Read

MILAN, ITALY – APRIL 06: People run and walk their dogs during the non competitive “Arcaplanet Dog … [+] Run” at CityLife district on April 06, 2024 in Milan, Italy. The goal of the dog-friendly race was to raise funds to develop a guide dogs project. (Photo by Emanuele Cremaschi/Getty Images)

Getty Images

City leaders and planners have been urged to put health at the heart of urban development in a new report.

The new edition of the Healthy and Climate-Resilient Cities report by Bupa, C40 Cities and the Norman Foster Foundation looks at how stakeholders can create health-centred and climate resilient urban environments.

It argues city leaders and urban designers of the future will need to be equipped with the knowledge and skills to protect the population from the devastating impacts of climate change.

In order to achieve this, the report calls for city leaders to prioritise health-focused urban design.

This includes seeing health as the foundation for equitable and just climate-resilient city planning.

And accelerating adaptation efforts that will build city resilience and health resilience to climate change.

“City-dwellers are likely to face some of the worst consequences of the climate crisis, such as air pollution largely from fossil fuel combustion, extreme heat, water scarcity, heavy rainfall and flooding,” the report states.

“They also typically experience a lack of nature and green space.”

The report also outlines the support that future city leaders and urban designers need to realise this new model of cities.

This includes support to develop detailed methodologies that calculate impact, cost-benefits and return of investment of health-focused urban interventions.

The study also says they will need training on how to assess community needs and engage with those using spaces to encourage active mobility, create vibrant social public spaces and mixed-use land areas.

It also calls for more in-depth insights and examples of how healthcare works and can play an active role in driving preventative health interventions.

According to previous study by the C40 Cities group, more than 1.6 billion city residents will face extreme heat in 30 year’s time, and 800 million will be at risk from flooding.

In addition, the European Union’s climate monitoring body recently said it

Read More

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *