The role of urban green spaces in supporting active and healthy ageing: an exploration of behaviour–physical setting–gender correlations

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Xi Ye
  • Xuan Ren
  • Yuanzheng Shang
  • Jiayu Liu
  • Huangyu Feng
  • Yun Zhang

Purpose: Urban green spaces support people to approach active, healthy ageing, especially in high-density cities where they compensate for limited private living spaces. This research paper aims to examine how urban green spaces support active, healthy ageing by exploring correlations between behaviour, physical setting and gender difference among older people in a highly populated urban context. Design/methodology/approach: Urban parks in older neighbourhoods of Macau were selected for data collection. Photographic documentation was used to collect data, with 1,201 older people photographed identified as valid samples. Each was coded according to labels of behaviour, physical setting and gender. Chi-squared tests were conducted to assess correlations between behaviours and features of physical settings, and differences between genders in behaviours and physical settings. Logistic regression analysis was conducted to further examine associations between older people's behaviours and features of physical settings by gender. Findings: The research reveals types and frequency of behaviours displayed, preferred environmental features for different behaviours and gender differences in behaviours and preferred environmental features. Design principles targeting active, healthy ageing should consider particular amenities and street furniture, the arrangement of trees and landscapes and the integration of open and secluded places. Originality/value: Previous studies address older people's behaviour from the perspective of either environmental influence or gender difference, but there have been few studies on gendered behavioural differences among older people in urban green spaces. Analysing the behaviour–physical setting–gender relationship provides more evidence in the field of built environment studies.

Original languageEnglish
JournalInternational Journal of Architectural Research: Archnet-IJAR
ISSN1938-7806
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited.

    Research areas

  • Active and healthy ageing, Environmental behaviour, Gender difference, High-density city, Physical setting, Urban green space

ID: 389906302