Influence of Urban Space in the Happiness of Citizens - Rita Monfort

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    Influence of urban space in the happiness of citizens

    by Rita Monfort Salvador *

    Journal Urbanistica Informazioni  special issue. Urban Happines and Public Space. 3rd Biennal of Public

    Space. Bimonthly publication, pp.120- 122. Edited by Marichela Sepe, May - June 2015. ISSN: 0392-5005

    Happiness is a totally subjective concept for which everyone has their own idea about when and when not

    happy and what makes him/her happy and what not. The physical and spatial context, in which people are,

    can not make them happy, is a concept too complex and in which too much feelings and real facts influence

    to trivialize in that way, but an urban space can help develop this happiness.

    Some researches about urban happiness

    At the responses to a survey for my PhD Thesis I realize the amazing certainty of this. The PhD thesis is onurban sustainability and specifically the survey is on the relationship between the behavior of citizens

    (civility) and urban space (2015). Not all the survey is related to the relationship between happiness and

    urban space, but much of it is related with the feelings caused by this public space. One question,

    specifically, is as follows: ¿Consideras que un espacio público urbano (su diseño, su paisaje, sus

    recorridos…) puede influir en la felicidad de las personas que circulan por él?  (Do you think that an urban

     public space (its design, landscape, paths...) can influence the happiness of people moving for him?)

    One week before this survey was finished (when this paper was written), over 85% of people who had

    answered had said YES, the rest was divided equally between NO and Don't Know. The interest of this

    response is that not only professionals can think that an urban space can influence the happiness of citizens,

     but citizens themselves, external of town planning, are aware that these spaces influence their own

    happiness.

    Other research also shows that. This investigation (Quercia et al. 2014), published by Cornell University,

     proves that it is possible define not only the shortest paths, but also the most beautiful, the most peaceful and

    the happiest, thanks to an algorithm with reviews of citizens and their contributions on websites like Google

    Street View or Flickr. This was only studied in cities of London and Boston, but it shows another way of

    differentiate the urban paths, not only by the shortest or the most touristic:

    “Buildings and neighbourhoods speak. They speak of egalitarianism or elitism, beauty or ugliness,

    acceptance or arrogance. The aim of UrbanGems is to identify the visual cues that are generally associated

    with concepts difficult to define such beauty, happiness, quietness, or even deprivation. The difficult task of

    deciding what makes a building beautiful, or what is sought after in a quiet location is outsourced to the

    users of this site using comparisons of pictures. With a comprehensive list of aesthetic virtues at hand, wewould be more likely to systematically understand and re-create the environments we intuitively love”

    Giorgiana Varna (2014) talks about the civility of public spaces and she defines these kind of places as

    clean, friendly and inviting areas:

    “Civility refers to the overall cleanliness and tidiness of a public place, including those elements that are key

    in making a public place an inviting and attractive area (bins, green areas, public toilets...)”

    These areas could be define as a pleasant or nice areas. These kind of areas are the ones which make people

    happier. A place that you can consider pleasant, without stress, without anything that you don’t like, it's a

     place where you feel good, so the most sure is that this place improve your happiness more than other one.

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    Citizens: adults and children

    When a space leads that happiness, people return to it without even realizing it. As in the previous study,

    where people knew which route choose to make them happier between all the existing routes, people know

    which spaces have to choose to feel better. And people attract more people (Mikoleit and Pürckhauer 2011),

    so spaces that have an influence on the happiness of people indirectly also attract more people than if they do

    not cause any feeling or cause the opposite.

    For adults a space that can influence your happiness could be defined as a safe, friendly, beautiful space and

    in which they feel good. To get it there are some elements that can help such as urban furniture or vegetation,

    as well as good management climate in outer space (Olgyay 1963), cutting wind, favoring the sunshine

    wherever convenient or causing shadows where needed, making the urban space as pleasant as possible.

    When we talk about children, these characteristics of the space are simplified, as all they need to be happy is

    a place to play. Something as simple and upon which so many people are claiming now (as Francesco

    Tonucci -Frato- does). Sometimes with a space large enough for running, cycling or use the scooter is more

    than enough for them. Obviously the more elements they have to play, the better for them: stairs, ramps,sculptures that can touch and play with them ... Everyone knows that children have a great imagination to

    invent games where adults do not see anything. No need to build a playground (although they are also

    important in children). The " Miroir d'Eau" (Water mirror) of Bordeaux or water jets from Duke of York

    Square (London) are a good example of how something as simple as a water jet arising from ground can

    transform a space to turn it into a "playground" where children (and adults) can have fun and cool with water

    during good weather and return to being a normal space without anything during the cold winter.

     Figure 1– "Miroir d'Eau" (Water mirror) of Bordeaux, an example of how an urban space can influence at people’s happiness

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    The wow factor

    Another characteristic of urban space that influences the happiness of both children and adults is the wow

    factor. The son of a friend of Barcelona always drew their home with flowers on the outside as a garden. She

    did not understand it because they live in an apartment, so one day asked him why he always drew their

    house with a garden when they had no garden and he replied that they were flowers of the sidewalk. Most of

    the sidewalks tiles in Barcelona have a drawing of a flower with four petals (known as la flor de Barcelona -

    the flower of Barcelona - or el panot de flor   - the flower tile -). It has become a tourist object, but for this

    child these flowers are more and are part of his home: two happy endings for an element of urban space

    On the other hand, monotony is always boring and see urban spaces with the same urban landscape and

    nothing different, one after another, just does not cause any feeling, except boredom. It is not necessary that

    every space to be totally different from the side, only are needed details such as a map on the ground, a

    curious plaque, some urban art ... Elements which surprise you when you meet them and make that you want

    to return to that area only to see them again. Although one of the characteristics of civility is cleaning spaces,

    as we have seen before, sometimes not clean something (without going to the extreme) may also contribute

    to the surprise that can bring us happiness: the flowers falling from the trees "staining" colored the city floor,or brown leaves in autumn covering the park as a tapestry could be a good example. Even certain materials

    can help this: without addressing if they are better or worse for their specific function, there are some

    asphalts in which, curiously, leaves falling from trees are impregnated into it like a tattoo it were, causing

    change cityscape naturally.

     Figure 2– Leaves on the street: one asphalt does not retain the leaves, while the other one retains them. It’s like if the leaves were

    tattooed on the floor. When the leaves stop falling the ones that are on the floor disappear.

    It has not been talked at this paper about what do not produce happiness of public space but the oppositefeeling, which is relatively clear and recognizable by the vast majority. Something that almost everyone

    agrees. Just to name some of its characteristics: noise, dirt, not find a place to sit when we need or can not

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    shelter us in a shade from the sun in days of extreme heat. They are just some examples of what can do that

     people avoid a specific space.

    As you can see at not time at this paper is said that urban spaces make people “happy”, if not “happier”. This

    is important because, as it is said at the beginning, happiness is a complex concept and, although the urban

    space is very powerful, it's not so much as has the key of citizens’ happiness. But it was also seen that urban

    spaces and urban design can do a lot to improve citizens' happiness, and that this statement is longer

    considered a reality

    At the end having urban spaces which influence citizens’ happiness depends of all of us: urban planning

     professionals, urban and landscape designers, maintenance workers, citizens… It has to be one of the main

    goals of the urban space: to make people happier

    Notes* Architect. Doctoral Candidate, Program in Architecture, Building, Town Planning and Landscape, Universitat Politència de

    València (Spain). Research Student, Bartlett School of Planning, [email protected]

    References

    Mikoleit, A., Pürckhauer, M. 2011 Urban Code, 100 Lessons for Understanding the City. The MIT Press,

    Zurich.

    Olgyay, V. 1963  Design with climate. Bioclimatic approach to architectural regionalism. Princeton

    University Press, Princeton.

    Quercia, D., Schifanella, R., Aiello, LM. 2014 The Shortest Path to Happiness: Recommending Beautiful,Quiet, and Happy Routes in the City. Cornell University’s arXiv: arXiv:1407.1031, Ithaca, New York. 

    Varna, G. 2014 Measuring Public Space: The Star Model. Ashaget Publishing Limited, Surrey.