Friends of the Landscape Archive at Reading

The Landscape of Public Health - FOLAR Annual Symposium 2024

Landscape of Public Health - FOLAR Symposium 2024

The Landscape of Public Health is possibly one of the most important subjects FOLAR has tackled - not just health, but how public open space and designed landscapes have been used in the past for the benefit of the general public. As populations have becomes increasingly more urban in the 20C, landscape architects and managers working today in this area as academics and practitioners can demonstrate, with confidence and research-based evidence, to landscape and associated professions, local and central government politicians, and the public, what can be achieved today, and how this can be done, and how long term management needs to be part of this healthy uplift for the population. The most important benefit, apart from nurturing a generally healthier population, is reducing the differences in health between the most economically deprived populations and those better off .

One theme for the FOLAR symposia is how the past can inform the present and the future. There is definitely a lot of past when it comes to wise city elders understanding and believing ie knowing the connection between being outside and being healthy. One speaker at this event looks back to ancient civilisations to demonstrate this. But for some time now this ‘knowing’ is deemed not enough to convince leaders today to provide funding to create or maintain green spaces, they want evidence. Another of the speakers says enough - we have more than enough research, stop please! As can be expected - with two or so serial career researchers present – this view was swiftly challenged.

It is not enough to be outside. The quality of public green space has to be of a particular standard, and it has to be accessible for all ages and all people. Green space is equigenic - ie it is associated with reducing the difference in health between the most economically deprived people and those better off. This has been proven through research. And the mechanisms linking landscape and health are explained in the final talk.

This was a thought provoking symposium, and it generated one of the best question and answer sessions we have had so far.


1. Introduction

In his introduction Tim Gale stated that 4.6m adults seek help, each year, for mental health difficulties. However, while the need for sunlight, clean air and water, and green open space with trees  - fundamental elements not only for sustaining a healthy population, but also for landscape architecture - have always been important in city design, even today, these are not available equally for all the population.

Tim Gale is a Past President of the Landscape Institute, He has practised in local government and private practice on projects in the UK and abroad. He was a member of the Urban Green Spaces Task Force and a member of the steering group for CABE Space. Since leaving employment he is a member of the Regional Design Panel and is currently organising the Hal Moggridge celebration for FOLAR next September. Gardening and painting are also important activities.

Peter SimcoeComment