Park design and children's active play: a microscale spatial analysis of intensity of play in Olmsted's Delaware Park

Author:

Baek Solhyon1,Raja Samina1,Park Jiyoung2,Epstein Leonard H3,Yin Li4,Roemmich James N5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urban and Regional Planning University at Buffalo, The State University of New York 114 Diefendorf Hall, Buffalo, NY 14214-8032, USA

2. Department of Urban and Regional Planning University at Buffalo, The State University of New York 05L Hayes Annex C, 3435 Main St. Buffalo, NY 14214-3087, USA;and Department of Public Administration; and Graduate School of Governance Sungkyunkwan University 40402 Faculty Hall, Jongro-Gu, Seoul 110-745, South Korea

3. Department of Pediatrics University at Buffalo, The State University of New York 3435 Main Street, G56 Farber Hall, Buffalo, NY 14214, USA

4. Department of Urban and Regional Planning University at Buffalo, The State University of New York 114 Diefendorf Hall, Buffalo, NY 14214-8032

5. USDA-ARS-NPA Grand Forks Human Nutrition Research Center

Abstract

This paper offers a microscale exploration of the role of park design on the intensity of physical activity among youth. The actual, unstructured use of a park—specifically, Delaware Park, an Olmsted-designed park in Buffalo, New York—by ninety-four children was observed and analyzed objectively using geographic information systems, global positioning systems, and accelerometers. Data were analyzed at the scale of 25 ft x 25 ft cells overlaid as a grid on the entire park. Results from the regression analysis show that particular features of parks—especially complexity in landscape surfaces, proximity to sport facilities and playgrounds, and the availability of pedestrian trails—enable greater intensity of youth physical activity in a park.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Environmental Science,Geography, Planning and Development

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