ENVIRONMENTS BY DESIGN 2021 - ENVIRONMENTS BY DESIGN: HEALTH, WELLBEING AND PLACE
Date2021-12-01 - 2021-12-03
Deadline2021-06-25
VenueVIRTUAL, UK - United Kingdom
KeywordsBUILT ENVIRONMENT; PUBLIC HEALTH; SOCIOLOGY
Topics/Call fo Papers
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CALL:
On January 1st, 2020, the world woke to news that a pneumonia outbreak in Wuhan, China, had been identified as a strain of coronavirus. By March, the World Health Organization would define it as a pandemic and the most serious global health threat on the planet. Under lockdown conditions the relationship between health and the spaces we inhabit became central.
The response from professionals and academics was immediate. Public health officials became consultants on ‘healthy buildings’, infectious disease specialists advised on planning codes, mental health experts became advisors on design strategy. Environmental psychologists collaborated on adapting homes for lockdown, sociologists re-examined behaviour in public space; teachers critiqued new spatial uses of the classrooms and, by extension, interior work environments of every type.
It is tempting to see this recent global concern about health and environments as new. The reality is, it has a long history. The public health profession was born from the housing conditions of the 19th century urban poor. ‘Sick building syndrome’ has been a concern for years. Demands for walkable neighbourhoods are long standing. Housing for the elderly, accessible design, and the broader healthy cities agenda globally, all pre-date COVID-19.
Seen in this light, this conference seeks to bring recent experiences and responses into dialogue with these longer standing areas of research into health, wellbeing and environments.
DISCIPLINES + THEMES:
The event will have multiple thematic strands built around submissions. They will include themes of interest particular to the partner institutions such as:
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COVID-19, Public health, environmental psychology, mental health
Accessible design and social inclusion
Public space inequities and cross societal groups
Welfare institutions – hospitals, schools, community centres and more:
Behaviors, communities, neighborhoods and housing
Connectivity across healthcare and the built environments
Disciplines include:
Public Health, Architecture, Urban Design, Mental Health, Sociology, Housing, Environmental Psychology, Interior Design, Landscape Architecture.
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CALL:
On January 1st, 2020, the world woke to news that a pneumonia outbreak in Wuhan, China, had been identified as a strain of coronavirus. By March, the World Health Organization would define it as a pandemic and the most serious global health threat on the planet. Under lockdown conditions the relationship between health and the spaces we inhabit became central.
The response from professionals and academics was immediate. Public health officials became consultants on ‘healthy buildings’, infectious disease specialists advised on planning codes, mental health experts became advisors on design strategy. Environmental psychologists collaborated on adapting homes for lockdown, sociologists re-examined behaviour in public space; teachers critiqued new spatial uses of the classrooms and, by extension, interior work environments of every type.
It is tempting to see this recent global concern about health and environments as new. The reality is, it has a long history. The public health profession was born from the housing conditions of the 19th century urban poor. ‘Sick building syndrome’ has been a concern for years. Demands for walkable neighbourhoods are long standing. Housing for the elderly, accessible design, and the broader healthy cities agenda globally, all pre-date COVID-19.
Seen in this light, this conference seeks to bring recent experiences and responses into dialogue with these longer standing areas of research into health, wellbeing and environments.
DISCIPLINES + THEMES:
The event will have multiple thematic strands built around submissions. They will include themes of interest particular to the partner institutions such as:
–
COVID-19, Public health, environmental psychology, mental health
Accessible design and social inclusion
Public space inequities and cross societal groups
Welfare institutions – hospitals, schools, community centres and more:
Behaviors, communities, neighborhoods and housing
Connectivity across healthcare and the built environments
Disciplines include:
Public Health, Architecture, Urban Design, Mental Health, Sociology, Housing, Environmental Psychology, Interior Design, Landscape Architecture.
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Other CFPs
Last modified: 2021-01-30 13:23:58