Silvia Pérez-Bou , Ana Sánchez-Ostiz , Nirmal Kishnani , Juan Gamero-Salinas
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Social sustainability is often overlooked in building design, particularly in dense urban environments with limited green and public spaces. Singapore provides a unique context to examine buildings that successfully integrate social and ecological spaces, supported by progressive policies and regulations. This study investigates key factors that contribute to creating community-oriented socio-ecological environments. Using Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA) across 31 socio-ecological variables, we analyzed 30 diverse buildings in Singapore, including residential, mixed-use, educational, healthcare, and hotel buildings. Six architectural design strategies —perimeter buffers, horizontal breezeways, vertical breezeways, breezeway courtyards, breezeway atria, and green roofs— were evaluated for their impact on these factors. A composite desirability score, derived from factor scores using desirability functions and K-means clustering, was used to identify high-performing buildings. EFA revealed four key factors: enhancing environmental quality, promoting physical wellness, improving mental wellness, and increasing social amenities. Mixed-use and public housing buildings emerged as the most effective in fostering socio-ecological benefits, followed by educational and hospital buildings, with private housing showing the least impact. Notably, different design strategies contributed statistically to each factor: horizontal breezeways are linked to higher environmental quality, perimeter buffers to higher mental wellness, and breezeway courtyards to higher accessibility to amenities. These findings provide actionable insights for designing buildings that promote both social and ecological sustainability in dense urban contexts.
期刊介绍:
Urban Forestry and Urban Greening is a refereed, international journal aimed at presenting high-quality research with urban and peri-urban woody and non-woody vegetation and its use, planning, design, establishment and management as its main topics. Urban Forestry and Urban Greening concentrates on all tree-dominated (as joint together in the urban forest) as well as other green resources in and around urban areas, such as woodlands, public and private urban parks and gardens, urban nature areas, street tree and square plantations, botanical gardens and cemeteries.
The journal welcomes basic and applied research papers, as well as review papers and short communications. Contributions should focus on one or more of the following aspects:
-Form and functions of urban forests and other vegetation, including aspects of urban ecology.
-Policy-making, planning and design related to urban forests and other vegetation.
-Selection and establishment of tree resources and other vegetation for urban environments.
-Management of urban forests and other vegetation.
Original contributions of a high academic standard are invited from a wide range of disciplines and fields, including forestry, biology, horticulture, arboriculture, landscape ecology, pathology, soil science, hydrology, landscape architecture, landscape planning, urban planning and design, economics, sociology, environmental psychology, public health, and education.