Department of Architecture and Civil Engineering, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China; City University of Hong Kong Shenzhen Research Institute, Shenzhen, China.
Faculty of Architecture, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China.
Soc Sci Med. 2018 Jul;208:41-49. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.05.022. Epub 2018 May 9.
Accumulating evidence shows that urban greenspaces have great health benefits, but establishing a causal relationship is difficult. It is often hypothesized that walking and physical activity are mediators in the relationship between urban greenspaces and health outcomes. Furthermore, most urban greenspace-physical activity studies have focused on parks rather than on landscaped streets, even though the latter are the most popular places for physical activity. The lack of research attention for landscaped streets is largely due to the fact that street greenery is difficult to measure, especially at eye level. Using readily available Google Street View images, we developed methods and tools to assess the availability of eye-level street greenery. A two-layered study was developed that 1) examined the association between urban greenspaces and the odds of walking (versus not walking) for 90,445 participants in the Hong Kong Travel Characteristics Survey and 2) carried out sensitivity analysis of the association between urban greenspaces and total walking time for a subset of 6770 participants. Multilevel regression models were developed to reveal the associations between street greenery and walking behaviors while controlling for sociodemographic characteristics and other activity-influencing built environment factors, taking into account the inherent clustering within the data. The results showed that both street greenery and the number of parks were associated with higher odds of walking; street greenery but not parks was associated with total walking time. Our results suggest that walking behavior is at least as strongly affected by eye-level street greenery as by parks. They also implicitly support the health benefits of urban greenspaces via walking and physical activity. With the large sample size, our findings pertain to the entire population of Hong Kong. Furthermore, the use of Google Street View is a sound and effective way to assess eye-level greenery, which may benefit further health studies.
越来越多的证据表明,城市绿地对健康有很大益处,但要确定其因果关系却很困难。人们通常假设,步行和身体活动是城市绿地与健康结果之间关系的中介。此外,大多数城市绿地与身体活动的研究都集中在公园上,而不是景观街道上,尽管后者是最受欢迎的身体活动场所。景观街道缺乏研究关注主要是因为街道绿化很难测量,尤其是在平视高度。我们使用现成的谷歌街景图像,开发了方法和工具来评估平视街道绿化的可用性。进行了一项两层研究:1)在香港出行特征调查中,对 90445 名参与者进行了城市绿地与步行(而非不步行)可能性之间的关联分析;2)对 6770 名参与者的一个子集进行了城市绿地与总步行时间之间关联的敏感性分析。开发了多层次回归模型,以揭示街道绿化与步行行为之间的关联,同时控制社会人口特征和其他影响活动的建筑环境因素,考虑到数据中的固有聚类。结果表明,街道绿化和公园数量都与较高的步行可能性相关;与总步行时间相关的是街道绿化,而不是公园。我们的研究结果表明,步行行为至少与公园一样受到平视街道绿化的强烈影响。它们还间接地支持了城市绿地通过步行和身体活动带来的健康益处。由于样本量大,我们的发现适用于整个香港人口。此外,使用谷歌街景是评估平视绿化的一种合理有效的方法,这可能有益于进一步的健康研究。