Dallimer Martin, Davies Zoe G, Irvine Katherine N, Maltby Lorraine, Warren Philip H, Gaston Kevin J, Armsworth Paul R
Sustainability Research Institute, School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK.
Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology (DICE), School of Anthropology and Conservation, University of Kent, Canterbury CT2 7NR, UK.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2014 Aug 7;11(8):7977-92. doi: 10.3390/ijerph110807977.
For many people, urban greenspaces are the only places where they encounter the natural world. This is concerning as there is growing evidence demonstrating that human well-being is enhanced by exposure to nature. There is, therefore, a compelling argument to increase how frequently people use urban greenspaces. This may be achieved in two complementary ways by encouraging: (I) non-users to start visiting urban greenspaces; (II) existing users to visit more often. Here we examine the factors that influence frequency of greenspace visitation in the city of Sheffield, England. We demonstrate that people who visit a site least frequently state lower self-reported psychological well-being. We hypothesised that a combination of socio-demographic characteristics of the participants, and the biophysical attributes of the greenspaces that they were visiting, would be important in influencing visit frequency. However, socio-demographic characteristics (income, age, gender) were not found to be predictors. In contrast, some biophysical attributes of greenspaces were significantly related to use frequency. Frequent use was more likely when the time taken to reach a greenspace was shorter and for sites with a higher index of greenspace neglect, but were unrelated to tree cover or bird species richness. We related these results to the motivations that people provide for their visits. Infrequent users were more likely to state motivations associated with the quality of the space, while frequent users gave motivations pertaining to physical, repeated activities. This suggests that there may be no simple way to manage greenspaces to maximise their use across user cohorts as the motivations for visits are very different.
对许多人来说,城市绿地是他们接触自然世界的唯一场所。这令人担忧,因为越来越多的证据表明,接触自然能提升人类福祉。因此,有一个令人信服的理由来增加人们使用城市绿地的频率。这可以通过两种互补的方式来实现,即鼓励:(一)非使用者开始前往城市绿地;(二)现有使用者更频繁地前往。在这里,我们研究了影响英国谢菲尔德市绿地游览频率的因素。我们发现,游览频率最低的人自我报告的心理健康水平较低。我们假设,参与者的社会人口特征以及他们所游览绿地的生物物理属性相结合,会对游览频率产生重要影响。然而,社会人口特征(收入、年龄、性别)并未被发现是预测因素。相比之下,绿地的一些生物物理属性与使用频率显著相关。当到达绿地所需时间较短且绿地忽视指数较高时,人们更有可能频繁使用绿地,但这与树木覆盖或鸟类物种丰富度无关。我们将这些结果与人们给出的游览动机联系起来。不常使用者更有可能提及与空间质量相关的动机,而频繁使用者给出的动机则与身体的重复性活动有关。这表明,可能没有简单的方法来管理绿地,以最大限度地提高不同用户群体对其的使用,因为游览动机差异很大。