In April, we adopted a new name, Healthy Places by Design. Although we shared our thinking behind this change early on, we’ve also continued to refine our understanding about what this means for our team and for healthy community leaders and advocates.
Maybe we’re splitting hairs, but we think there are important distinctions to highlight when we talk about places, healthy places, and most importantly, healthy people. Our working definition of “place” is simple: People + Space = Place.
Spaces become places when people live, work, learn, and play in them. When they infuse their histories, cultures, stories, and visions of their futures into them. We know that every place has unique assets and opportunities. And we believe in the power of people to harness those assets and reshape their communities into healthier places to live.
As a concept, this means expanding our notion of what a place is. Places can be as expansive as entire neighborhoods or as small as a rock under a tree—the spot a child goes to daydream. Some places are filled with people. Some places are quiet corners where we go to be alone. And we often think of healthy places as those with access to healthy food, opportunities to be active, clean air and water, no pollution, and no harassment or violence.
Those goals are, at a minimum, what we’re working toward when we envision health and wellbeing for all. And, as our team discussed in a recent conversation, there are other elements of a healthy place that allow people to not just survive, but truly thrive:
In practice, including people profoundly affects the success and sustainability of place-based initiatives. This means:
As we grow our understanding of, and engagement with, the places where we live, learn, work, and play, I’ll leave you with a quote that has stayed with me since I first read it years ago: “The mutual love affair between people and their place is one of the most powerful influences in our lives, yet we rarely think of it in terms of a relationship.” 1 Let’s start by including positive human relationships in our definition of healthy places.
Photo: Stacey Wegley
1. Kageyama, Peter. For the Love of Cities: The love affair between people and their places. Creative Cities Productions, 2011.