TY - BOOK TI - Greening Urban Spaces: A Healthy Community Design SN - 9783036583501 PY - 2023/// PB - MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute KW - Research & information: general KW - bicssc KW - accessibility KW - applied research KW - art construction KW - big data KW - big data technology KW - buffer radius KW - China KW - community parks KW - community space KW - Community spatial structure planning KW - community structure KW - cultural image KW - cultural landscape heritage KW - different research scales KW - diversity KW - driving factors KW - ecological environment KW - ecological well-being performance KW - ecosystem services KW - enterprise digital transformation KW - environmental cognition KW - environmental regulation KW - equity KW - farmland KW - FCEM KW - FCEM manufacturing enterprises KW - G2SFCA KW - GIS-DEA-MI model KW - government governance KW - green ecology KW - green space quality KW - greening urban spaces KW - health and safety management KW - health security KW - healthy city KW - healthy community KW - heritage preservation and utilization KW - international law of marine environmental protection KW - international public safety KW - internet of things KW - landscape pattern metrics KW - life circle KW - mediating effect KW - meta-regression analysis KW - mixed methods KW - park usage KW - PSO-K-means KW - public health KW - public transit KW - rail transit KW - richness KW - rural environment KW - spatial Durbin model KW - street design KW - street spatial patterns KW - street vitality KW - super-SBM model KW - sustainable development KW - sustainable development efficiency KW - system building KW - topographic KW - transit fare KW - travel time KW - urban fringe KW - urban green space KW - urban innovation KW - urban public service system KW - value transfer N1 - Open Access N2 - The focus of this reprint is to draw attention to Greening Urban Spaces. Cities play a central role in advancing economic and social developments and addressing the challenges that humanity face today. Although cities provide access to better health services, urban life is also associated with factors that are deleterious to human health, such as increased stress, mental fatigue, pollution, as well as sedentary lifestyles and a disconnection to the natural environment. There is a growing consensus across many academic fields and health promotion policy areas that the provision of accessible and high-quality greenspace is a vital element in the effort against the adverse health effects of urbanization. However, there are still research gaps that need to be addressed before the health benefits of greenspaces can be fully integrated into practice UR - https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/113871 UR - https://mdpi.com/books/pdfview/book/7712 ER -