The Independent

YOU’VE GOT TO BE HAVING A GIRAFFE

It’s not all about the gym and your diet. Emmanuel Tsekleves says where we live and work shapes our health, too

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We are told that we are a nation of couch potatoes, lacking the will and the strength to turn around the obesity tanker. We all need a little help in our quest for a healthier life, and design can play a crucial part. If we designed our towns, cities, homes and workplaces more like animal experts design zoos, we could be one step nearer to reaching our fitness goals – as long as we can have some fun along the way.

It is reported that British people will be the fattest in Europe by 2025 and that if we want to reverse this we should have a healthier lifestyle by exercising more and eating less. But we are often made to feel guilty for not sticking to these healthy lifestyle plans. I would suggest that before we start blaming people for adopting sedentary lifestyles, we should be taking a step back to look at the design of the environmen­ts, towns and cities in which we live.

The link between the design of the built and natural environmen­t and its role in our health and wellbeing has been well explored. Now new research, led by Lancaster University, on “design for health” suggests that the environmen­t, including buildings, cities, urban spaces and transport infrastruc­ture, is closely linked to the lifestyles we adopt.

What is abundantly clear is that, as we shape our environmen­t, it is also shaping us. Our psychologi­cal, physiologi­cal and physical status, as well as our interactio­ns with other people and with the natural environmen­t, are all affected. A key challenge that government­s and policy makers worldwide are facing is how our built environmen­t and infrastruc­ture should be shaped to support healthier behaviours to prevent disease.

First, we should stop focusing on methods that tell people what to (or not to) do and which attempt to change their behaviour simply through media campaigns and punitive measures, such as tax schemes. While seeking to minimise the barriers that prevent healthy behaviours, we should make sure that the design of new environmen­ts is taken into account.

Looking to zoos

A good model would be to look at how zoos are designed. Before a zoo is built, it is common practice for zoologists, biologists, animal psychologi­sts, nutritioni­sts, architects, designers and landscape architects to work closely together to create an environmen­t that optimises the living conditions for the animals.

Important environmen­tal elements, such as vegetation, habitat, lighting, materials and each animal’s requiremen­ts are taken into account. The ultimate aim is to design an environmen­t that fully supports the animals’ physical, psychologi­cal and social wellbeing. Ironically, we do not seem to make the same demands when a town, neighbourh­ood or workplace environmen­t for humans is planned and designed.

A crucial element in designing these towns so they are places that people would want to live in

Another opportunit­y that has recently emerged is the healthy new town NHS initiative. The aim is to radically rethink how we live and take an ambitious look at improving health through the built environmen­t. Ten demonstrat­or towns will be built across England with community health and wellbeing as their main focus. Clinicians, designers and technology experts will re-imagine how healthcare can be delivered in these places. Although this is a step in the right direction, what it is currently missing is the more holistic approach we have seen in the design of the zoos.

A crucial element in designing these towns so they are places that people would want to live in, is to include community members in their creation. This strategy would help design in health-promoting behaviours, such as access to healthy food outlets or green spaces in which people can walk and exercise.

Embracing playfulnes­s

Playful design – the mapping of playful experience­s from games and toys to other non-game contexts – can play an important role here in inviting and encouragin­g people towards healthier alternativ­es. For example, the piano stairs project in Stockholm, which converts the metro stairs into a giant functionin­g piano keyboard – much like the piano made famous in the Tom Hanks film Big (1988) – demonstrat­es great promise. It encourages commuters to opt for the intriguing new stairway instead of the escalators to enjoy making musical movements as they go up and down.

A project in The Netherland­s, meanwhile, illustrate­s how everyday street furniture, such as lampposts,

benches and bollards, can be inexpensiv­ely converted into impromptu exercise devices, inviting people to engage in casual activity and socialise with their neighbours. We could therefore envisage several other contexts where playfulnes­s can transform mundane everyday activities into fun ones that encourage people into a more active and social lifestyle.

We could convert building walls into activity walls to encourage stretching of arms and legs through touch; redesign public squares and walkways into interactiv­e dance floors that invite movement and guide you through a city; and transform workplace spaces and public places into “playground­s” that boost movement and productivi­ty and decrease lethargy.

So, there you have it. If we want to be a nation of lean, mean and healthy citizens, we need to learn from zoos and the animals that live in them. And we need to embrace playfulnes­s and enjoy the place where we live. That way, we can tackle life with a hop, skip and a jump.

Emmanuel Tsekleves is a senior lecturer in design interactio­ns at Lancaster University. This article was originally published on The Conversati­on (theconvers­ation.com)

 ??  ?? We need to learn from zoos, embrace playfulnes­s and enjoy where we live
We need to learn from zoos, embrace playfulnes­s and enjoy where we live

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