The Fruit of Urban Nature
Top Cited Papers
- 1 September 2004
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Behavior
- Vol. 36 (5) , 678-700
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0193841x04264945
Abstract
What makes a neighborhood space vital? This article explores the possibility that the presence of trees and grass may be one of the key components of vital neighborhood spaces. We report on 758 observations of individuals in 59 outdoor common spaces in a residential development. Twenty-seven of the neighborhood common spaces were relatively green, whereas 32 were relatively barren. Results indicate that the presence of trees and grass is related to the use of outdoor spaces, the amount of social activity that takes place within them, and the proportion of social to nonsocial activities they support. The findings improve and broaden our understanding of the physical characteristics that influence social contact among neighbors and provide evidence that nature plays an important role in creating vital neighborhood spaces.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fertile Ground for Community: Inner‐City Neighborhood Common SpacesAmerican Journal of Community Psychology, 1998
- Green Common Spaces and the Social Integration of Inner-City Older AdultsEnvironment and Behavior, 1998
- Transforming Inner-City LandscapesEnvironment and Behavior, 1998
- Where Does Community Grow?Environment and Behavior, 1997
- Territorial Cognitions and Social Climate in Urban NeighborhoodsBasic and Applied Social Psychology, 1981
- Neighbors and FriendsResearch on Aging, 1979
- Residential density, social overload, and social withdrawalHuman Ecology, 1978
- Crowding and neighborhood mediation of urban densityPopulation and Environment, 1978
- Noise and Inattentiveness to Social CuesEnvironment and Behavior, 1977
- Some Psychological Benefits of an Outdoor Challenge ProgramEnvironment and Behavior, 1974