Congested Cities vs. Sprawl Makes You Fat: Unpacking the Health Effects of Planning Density

Item

Title
Congested Cities vs. Sprawl Makes You Fat: Unpacking the Health Effects of Planning Density
Description
Since the contemporary version of urban planning emerged in the nineteenth century, the field has been centrally concerned with the issue of density. Planners have variously tried to solve problems created by densities that were too high or too low, manipulate densities via regulations and infrastructure investments, and search for optimal density patterns to achieve social and environmental goals. Density has been of particular interest because, depending on the topic, different density levels and types appear to cause problems or create benefits, can typically be measured and compared with some precision, and are amenable to manipulation via the toolkit of urban and regional planning strategies. Here, Forsyth defines and classifies planning-related densities proposing that measured planning-relevant densities come in two types--discrete and proportional--both with area in the denominator of the calculation.
Accepted Manuscript
Creator
Forsyth, Ann
Subject
Urban Studies
Geography, Planning and Development
Publisher
Liverpool University Press
Date
2022-09-27T15:04:57Z
2018-06
2022-09-27T15:04:57Z
Type
Journal Article
Format
application/pdf
Identifier
Forsyth, Ann. 2018. "Congested Cities vs. Sprawl Makes You Fat: Unpacking the Health Effects of Planning Density." The Town Planning Review 89, no. 4: 333-54.
0041-0020
1478-341X
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37373271
10.3828/tpr.2018.21
Source
Town Planning Review
Language
en_US
Relation
Town Planning Review