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SANITY AND URBANITY

If you are an academic, urban designer, planner, health professional or citymaker, ​and would like to submit  an entry, please contact us:  ENTRY PITCH

For Mental Health Awareness Month, Think About the Built Environment

5/9/2017

 
By Erin Sharp Newton, Assoc. AIA, M. Arch.
Winter is on the wing, and spring is filtering in with fresh air, fresh thought and sunshine... and Mental Health Awareness Month.
This annual opportunity to raise public awareness about mental health was established by the National Association for Mental Health (now Mental Health America) in 1949, around the same time as legislators were founding the Housing Act of 1949, which would instigate urban development and renewal in America, and thus start to reshape our cities. Although the Housing Act plans did not pan out as originally intended, what was begun was a serious start to looking at how cities and the built environment could be inclusive and supportive of all citizens.
 
Of interest is what happens when we combine Mental Health Awareness with the built environment. How are we as designers, planners and citizens integrating what the past 68 years have shown us to do, or as Jane Jacobs would say, what to not do?
'Yes, the empire is sick, and, what is worse, it is trying to become accustomed to its sores. This is the aim of my explorations: examining the traces of happiness still to be glimpsed, I gauge its short supply. If you want to know how much darkness there is around you, you must sharpen your eyes, peering at the faint lights in the distance.' - Calvino, Italo. Invisible Cities. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1978.
Picture
City Shadow by Allen Jones, Sculptor, Wikimedia Commons
Each year a theme is presented for Mental Health Awareness Month, which is explored through the rest of the year. This year’s theme is “Risky Business” and focuses on the diverse risk factors for developing mental illness. The upcoming Mental Health America Annual Conference is aptly titled Sex, Drugs, and Rock & Roll, and will examine some of these risk factors.
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“We believe it's important to educate people about habits and behaviors that increase the risk of developing or exacerbating mental illnesses, or could be signs of mental health problems themselves. These include risk factors such as risky sex, prescription drug misuse, internet addiction, excessive spending, marijuana use, and troublesome exercise patterns." - Mental Health America (MHA)
However, risks to mental health are not confined to individual factors. The built environment can help create and maintain risk factors for mental illness by increasing stimulation while stripping away protective factors for good mental health, for example:
  • Reducing access to nature
  • Reducing opportunities for physical activity
  • Overloading the senses
  • Eroding privacy and quiet time
  • Interrupting sleep
  • Reducing safety (from crime to traffic to wayfinding)
  • Separating people from their social networks
Architects, urban planners and designers can make an impact. We, as designers of the world around us, can Mind the GAPS to help address these risks. We can open doors, create opportunities in our cities, societies, and communities to support awareness and address risks to improve mental health for all. We can dive into our own creative intelligence and promote green space, walkable cities, and infrastructure that allows us to move around and express happiness & health. We can look for where our efforts support or create opportunities for social interaction, community support, and personal freedom. We can advocate for creative space, for communal space, and for safe, meditative place. Through these efforts we can play a role in improving mental health across the board. Designing healthcare facilities, buildings, public spaces, and communities that take into consideration all the sensitive aspects of being unwell, creating humane opportunities for refuge (or outlet), and pro-actively advocating the development of physical places for healing and wellness. Being knowledgeable about what hurts, what helps, what heals. These are starters. We can:
  • Recognize environment affects the mind, the body and perception.
  • Boost cognitive health by creating visually and aesthetically pleasing buildings & cities.
  • Advocate for buildings, spaces, cities and communities that have plenty of fresh air, good light and green spaces, while reducing noise and visual pollution through good design.
  • Create buildings and places for refuge, escape and outlet.
  • Design places that facilitate people talking to each other in positive, natural social interactions.
  • Improve mental health by creating safe, walkable communities.
Picture
Jay Pritzker Pavilion, Millenium Park, Chicago (Illinois), USA, Wikimedia Commons
“Under the seeming disorder of the old city, wherever the old city is working successfully, is a marvelous order for maintaining the safety of the streets and the freedom of the city. It is a complex order. Its essence is intricacy of sidewalk use, bringing with it a constant succession of eyes. This order is all composed of movement and change, and although it is life, not art, we may fancifully call it the art form of the city and liken it to the dance — not to a simple-minded precision dance with everyone kicking up at the same time, twirling in unison and bowing off en masse, but to an intricate ballet in which the individual dancers and ensembles all have distinctive parts which miraculously reinforce each other and compose an orderly whole. The ballet of the good city sidewalk never repeats itself from place to place, and in any once place is always replete with new improvisations.” ― Jane Jacobs, The Death and Life of Great American Cities
Although it can be challenging to think about mental, emotional, and behavioral health problems, ignoring them won’t make them go away.  When there is illness, it affects those nearby.  When many are ill (as in 1 in 4 estimated) it affects society at large.  It is necessary to take good inventory of the risk factors within the built environment, if we are to help rebuild, strengthen, repair and recover.

Further information

Urban design and mental health:
  • How the city affects mental health
  • How urban design can impact mental health
  • The Mind the GAPS framework for designing better mental health into cities

Mental Health Awareness Month:
  • Mental Health Awareness Month toolkit (posters, media materials, fact sheets, social media, etc)
  • Mental Health America

About the Author

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Erin Newton is a UD/MH Fellow and part of NK Architects Healthcare Group in Morristown, New Jersey, USA. She holds a Master’s Degree in Architecture from UCLA and a Master’s in Design from Domus Academy in Milan, Italy. She is an Associate Member of the American Institute of Architects, a Board Member of the Hunterdon Drug Awareness Program, and is on two Health & Human Services Local Advisory Committees. Erin believes that integrity and creativity are fundamental to the success of the multi-faceted world of design and living.

@ESharpNewton

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