Encyclopedia (Aug 2023)

Merging Smart and Healthy Cities to Support Community Wellbeing and Social Connection

  • Susan Thompson,
  • Homa Rahmat,
  • Nancy Marshall,
  • Christine Steinmetz-Weiss,
  • Kate Bishop,
  • Linda Corkery,
  • Miles Park,
  • Christian Tietz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia3030078
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 3
pp. 1067 – 1084

Abstract

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Urban planning has long pursued the improvement of health and wellbeing through the rapidly evolving scholarship and practice of health-supportive environments, underpinned by the seminal World Health Organization’s Healthy Cities Framework. Although a much more recent development, technology has been informing urban planning, as well as advancing healthcare and personal wellbeing monitoring and assessment. Known as the Smart City movement, it has much to offer regarding life in towns and cities, as well as how they are managed, maintained, and developed. There is also a growing appreciation of the potential for smart city technology to enhance human and environmental health in the context of urban planning and public place making. This has been reinforced by the COVID-19 pandemic with its reawakening of community interest in health and wellbeing, including mental illness, a greater awareness of the importance of local environments, and an explosion of technological knowhow in the embrace of remote working, online shopping, and education. Using the example of the authors’ “Smart Social Spaces” project, this entry discusses the potential benefits of an evolving integrative concept called “Smart Healthy Social Spaces”. The aim is to support community wellbeing as part of everyday living, especially associated with social connection, in densely populated and culturally diverse urban environments, where locally situated public spaces are increasingly important for all citizens.

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