Physical Activity
Concerns about rising levels of obesity and cardiovascular disease have led to a considerable amount of attention to how the built environment can be designed to create more opportunities for physical activity. Physical activity is pursued in four purpose-related activity categories: work-related, household-related, recreational or leisure-time, and transportation-related. Some have hoped that by creating environments that increase travel walking and cycling, total physical activity will increase. This would have direct health benefits and also help reduce people's weight. Research to date is mixed, however, particularly in terms of whether the environment rather than social and psychological factors affects total physical activity. What matters is creating opportunities for physical activity, however, rather than saying one environment is healthier than another.
Design for Health Materials:
Other Resources:
Fact sheets and posters
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Journals and Journal Articles:
PowerPoint Presentations:
- Active Living: Promoting Health Through Community Design and Transportation
(File is 29 MB. May take a few moments to open)
The presentation by Active Living By Design provides a general overview of the relationships between the built environment, transportation, and physical activity and outlines the Active Living movement in the United States. Specific attention is directed toward the Active Living by Design national program and the other physical activity efforts.
Protocols, Kits, and Guides:
- Active Living Research: Tools and Measures
This web site provides links to over 15 urban design and park audit tools, produced by researchers from a variety of institutions, including the University of Minnesota, Harvard School of Public Health, and the University of Western Australia.
- Mapping Park Buffers: The Minnesota Method. 2005 (716 KB)
This technical paper, revised in 2005, illustrates a method of identifying access to open space along a street network, as opposed to the simpler technique of using straight line buffers. This approach deals with physical and human barriers to park access in a more realistic way.
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Reports and Guidelines:
- Design Guidelines for Active Michigan Communities
This document was designed to help Michigan communities integrate active living principles into their plans, policies and programs. It was created as part of Michigan 's Promoting Active Communities program, though its ideas can be useful to people and communities outside the state as well.
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Web sites:
- Active Living by Design – Publications Page
Documents include publications, policy briefs, and research reports and are divided into the following categories: community development; design; land use; parks, trails, and greenways; places and settings; public health; and transportation.
- Active Living Research Citations
This web page provides links to a wide variety of active living-related research papers. You can view the list for all articles from 2004-2005, or view them by category. Categories include, but are not limited to: concepts and models; health behavior; measuring the environment; measuring physical activity; and nutrition.
- Benefit-Cost Analysis of Bicycle Facilities
This tool provides planners, policy officials, and decision makers with a consistent framework to guide decisions about whether to build a new bicycle facility by estimating costs, the demand in terms of new cyclists, and measured economic benefits (e.g., time savings, increased livability, decreased health costs, a more enjoyable ride). The research underlying the guidelines and tool itself were developed at the University of Minnesota (Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs and Civil Engineering), in collaboration with Planners' Collaborative consulting firm, and the University of North Carolina- National Highway Safety Research Center.
- InformeDesign
InformeDesign is a research and communication tool for designers. Its search engine provides research summaries on many health themes. Each article summary has the following elements: design issue, design criteria, key concepts, research method, limitations, and commentary.
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