Urban environmental quality: Perceptions and measures in three UK cities

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Abstract

The recent promotion of city centre living within UK policy has led to commensurate interest in the quality of the urban environment, particularly the impact and influence that environmental quality has on quality of life and urban sustainability. This paper presents an overview of a study into environmental quality, looking at the environmental conditions and the opinions and experiences of people who live in three of the UK's major cities; London, Sheffield and Manchester. Environmental quality is both subjective and objective in its nature, and it is this combination that is of particular interest to this study. An innovative multi-method approach, combining qualitative and quantitative data collection techniques, has been developed and employed. Environmental monitoring (indoor and outdoor air quality and noise levels) was undertaken alongside participant lead photo-surveys, sound-walks and semistructured interviews with city centre residents. The case studies provide a detailed insight into the components that influence environmental quality; both perceived and measured. The collection and analysis of data has led to the production of 'local environmental quality maps' - spatial representations of local and expert knowledge on urban environmental factors. These maps offer a way to feed different perspectives on environmental issues to decision makers for future policy development. The findings of this study help to understand the influence environmental quality has on quality of life, this in turn can aid urban policy, planning and design. The wider implications of this study to the concept of urban sustainability are also discussed.

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APA

Moore, G., Croxford, B., Adams, M., Refaee, M., Cox, T., & Sharples, S. (2006). Urban environmental quality: Perceptions and measures in three UK cities. WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment, 93, 785–794. https://doi.org/10.2495/SC060751

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