Creating Restorative Nearby Green Spaces for Knowledge Workers: Theoretical Mechanisms, Site Evaluation Criteria, and Design Guidelines
HU Xueling, LIU Xueming, LI Jiali, JIANG Bin
Creating Restorative Nearby Green Spaces for Knowledge Workers: Theoretical Mechanisms, Site Evaluation Criteria, and Design Guidelines
Knowledge workers drive social and economic development in contemporary cities but often exhibit poor psychological and physical health because of sedentary work, long-term and intense mental labor, and high-level occupational competition. Thus, providing high-quality restorative green spaces in knowledge workers’ proximity to promote their health and well-being has become an important and pressing need. Although the multiple health benefits of proximity to green spaces have been highlighted, the existing planning and design practices are not well supported by scientific theories and evidence. This study interprets the health benefits of proximity to green spaces in work environments considering four theoretical mechanisms: stress reduction, attention restoration and landscape preference, physical activity promotion, and sensory enrichment through an integrative literature review. Next, the paper identifies the key environmental characteristics of green spaces that can enhance the health and well-being of knowledge workers. In addition, it develops a set of criteria for evaluating the restorative capacity of existing sites and a set of guidelines to design restorative nearby green spaces, and proposes a simple paradigm to connect interdisciplinary research and practice.
Knowledge Workers / Restorative Nearby Green Spaces / Mental Health / Physical Health / Restorative Landscape / Performance Evaluation
[1] |
Drucker, P. F. (2006). The Effective Executive: The Definitive Guide to Getting the Right Things Done. Collins.
|
[2] |
Fossen, F., & Sorgner, A. (2019). Mapping the future of occupations: Transformative and destructive effects of new digital technologies on jobs. Foresight and STI Governance, 13(2), 10-18.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[3] |
Ricard, S. (2020). The Year of the Knowledge Worker. Forbes.
|
[4] |
Güldenberg, S., Ernst, E., & North, K. (Eds.). (2021). Managing Work in the Digital Economy. Springer Cham.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[5] |
Packirisamy, P., Meenakshy, M., & Jagannathan, S. (2017). Burnout during early career: Lived experiences of the knowledge workers in India. Journal of Enterprise Information Management, 30(1), 96-121.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[6] |
Liu, X., Jiang, B., & Li, Z. (2020). Landscape design of digital economy office park to promote research and development staff’s health and well-being: Theories, strategies, and approaches. South Architecture, (4), 48-55. doi:10.3969/j.issn.1000-0232.2020.04.048
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[7] |
Davis, G. (2002). Anytime/anyplace computing and the future of knowledge work. Communications of the ACM, 45(12), 67-73.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[8] |
Harter, J. K., Schmidt, F. L., & Keyes, C. L. M. (2003). Well-Being in the Workplace and Its Relationship to Business Outcomes: A Review of the Gallup Studies. In C. L. M. Keyes, & J. Haidt (Eds.), Flourishing: Positive Psychology and the Life Well-Lived (pp. 205-224). American Psychological Association.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[9] |
Kestel, D. (2019). Mental Health in the Workplace: Going Global. World Health Organization.
|
[10] |
Confederation of British Industry. (2011). Healthy returns? Absence and Workplace Health Survey 2011.
|
[11] |
Jiang, B., Chen, J., & Wang, L. (2018). Cardiovascular diseases due to stress arisen from social risk factors: A synopsis and prospectiveness. Nano LIFE, 8(2), 1840003.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[12] |
Barton, J., & Pretty, J. (2010). What is the best dose of nature and green exercise for improving mental health? A multi-study analysis. Environmental Science & Technology, 44(10), 3947-3955.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[13] |
Holtan, M. T., Dieterlen, S. L., & Sullivan, W. C. (2015). Social life under cover: Tree canopy and social capital in Baltimore, Maryland. Environment and Behavior, 47(5), 502-525.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[14] |
Warburton, D. E., Nicol, C. W., & Bredin, S. S. (2006). Health benefits of physical activity: The evidence. Canadian Medical Association Journal, 174(6), 801-809.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[15] |
News, D. (2020). Physical Inactivity a Leading Cause of Disease and Disability, Warns WHO. World Health Organization.
|
[16] |
Mumford, M. D., Scott, G. M., Gaddis, B., & Strange, J. M. (2002). Leading creative people: Orchestrating expertise and relationships. The Leadership Quarterly, 13(6), 705-750.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[17] |
Kasof, J. (1997). Creativity and breadth of attention. Creativity Research Journal, 10(4), 303-315.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[18] |
Jiang, B., Wang, H., Larsen, L., Bao, F., Li, Z., & Pryor, M. (2019). Quality of sweatshop factory outdoor environments matters for workers’ stress and anxiety: A participatory smartphone-photography survey. Journal of Environmental Psychology, (65), 101336.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[19] |
Kobayashi, T., & Middlemiss, S. (2009). Employers’ liability for occupational stress and death from overwork in the United States and the United Kingdom. Common Law World Review, 38(2), 137-169.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[20] |
Kaplan, S., & Berman, M. G. (2010). Directed attention as a common resource for executive functioning and self-regulation. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 5(1), 43-57.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[21] |
Bratman, G. N., Hamilton, J. P., Hahn, K. S., Daily, G. C., & Gross, J. J. (2015). Nature experience reduces rumination and subgenual prefrontal cortex activation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 112(28), 8567-8572.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[22] |
Settle, M. (2021). The Digitally Transformed Workplace: Productivity Paradise or Orwellian Nightmare? Forbes.
|
[23] |
Tetu, L. (2021). The Post-Pandemic Workplace Will Be Defined by Proficiency, not Efficiency. Forbes.
|
[24] |
Padma, V., Anand, N. N., Gurukul, S. M., Javid, S. M., Prasad, A., & Arun, S. (2015). Health problems and stress in information technology and business process outsourcing employees. Journal of Pharmacy & Bioallied Sciences, (7), S9-13.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[25] |
Salin, D. (2003). Ways of explaining workplace bullying: A review of enabling, motivating and precipitating structures and processes in the work environment. Human Relations, 56(10), 1213-1232.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[26] |
Leach, L. S., Poyser, C., & Butterworth, P. (2017). Workplace bullying and the association with suicidal ideation/thoughts and behaviour: A systematic review. Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 74(1), 72-79.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[27] |
De Bloom, J., Kinnunen, U., & Korpela, K. (2014). Exposure to nature versus relaxation during lunch breaks and recovery from work: Development and design of an intervention study to improve workers’ health, well-being, work performance and creativity. BMC Public Health, 14(1), 1-15.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[28] |
Apple. (2022). Apple park visitor center—Apple Store.
|
[29] |
Google. (2022). Build for everyone—Google careers.
|
[30] |
Sohu. (2020). Huawei invested tens of billions to build a European town in Dongguan, and the number of places to visit is rare, but it still becomes an Internet celebrity attraction.
|
[31] |
Tencent web. (2020). Amazing! Release of 12 „Super Headquarters” in Shenzhen Bay.
|
[32] |
Gritzka, S., Macintyre, T. E., Dörfel, D., Baker-Blanc, J. L., & Calogiuri, G. (2020). The effects of workplace nature-based interventions on the mental health and well-being of employees: A systematic review. Frontiers in Psychiatry, (11).
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[33] |
Hui, F., Aye, L. (2018). Occupational stress and workplace design. Buildings, 8(10), 1-18.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[34] |
Torraco, R. J. (2005). Writing integrative literature reviews: Guidelines and examples. Human Resource Development Review, 4(3), 356-367.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[35] |
Whittemore, R. (2005). Analysis of integration in nursing science and practice. Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 37(3), 261-267.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[36] |
Ulrich, R. S., Simons, R. F., Losito, B. D., Fiorito, E., Miles, M. A., & Zelson, M. (1991). Stress recovery during exposure to natural and urban environments. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 11(3), 201-230,
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[37] |
Ulrich, R. S. (2007). Visual landscapes and psychological well-being. Landscape Research, 4(1), 17-23.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[38] |
Kaplan, S. (1995). The restorative benefits of nature: Toward an integrative framework. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 15(3), 169-182.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[39] |
Kaplan, S., & Kaplan, R. (1989). The experience of nature: A psychological perspective. Cambridge University Press.
|
[40] |
Kaplan, S. (1987). Aesthetics, affect, and cognition: Environmental preference from an evolutionary perspective. Environment and Behavior, 19(1), 3-32.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[41] |
Ulrich, R. (1993). Biophilia, Biophobia, and Natural Landscapes. In S. K. Kellert, & E. O. Wilson (Eds.), The Biophilia Hypothesis. Island Press.
|
[42] |
Wilson, E. O. (1984). Biophilia. Harvard University Press.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[43] |
Hartig, T., & Evans, G. W. (1993). Psychological Foundations of Nature Experience. In Advances in Psychology (Vol. 96, pp. 427-457). North-Holland.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[44] |
Jiang, B., Mak, C. N. S., Zhong, H., Larsen, L., & Webster., C. J. (2018). From broken windows to perceived routine activities: Examining impacts of environmental interventions on perceived safety of urban alleys. Frontiers in Psychology, 9.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[45] |
Stanton, R., To, Q. G., Khalesi, S., Khalesi, S., Williams, S. L., Alley, S. J., Thwaite, T. L., Fenning, A. S., & Vandelanotte, C. (2020). Depression, anxiety and stress during COVID-19: Associations with changes in physical activity, sleep, tobacco and alcohol use in australian adults. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(11).
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[46] |
Kuo, M. (2015). How might contact with nature promote human health? Promising mechanisms and a possible central pathway. Frontiers in Psychology, 6.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[47] |
Ulrich, R. S. (1983). Aesthetic and affective response to natural environment. In Behavior and the natural environment (pp. 85-125). Springer.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[48] |
van den Berg, A. E., Hartig, T., & Staats, H. (2007). Preference for nature in urbanized societies: Stress, restoration, and the pursuit of sustainability. Journal of Social Issues, 63(1), 79-96.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[49] |
van den Berg, A. E., Koole, S. L., & van der Wulp, N. Y. (2003). Environmental preference and restoration: (How) are they related? Journal of Environmental Psychology, 23(2), 135-146.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[50] |
Anderson, E., & Shivakumar, G. (2013). Effects of exercise and physical activity on anxiety. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 4(27),
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[51] |
Salmon, P. (2001). Effects of physical exercise on anxiety, depression, and sensitivity to stress: A unifying theory. Clinical Psychology Review, 21(1), 33-61.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[52] |
Fleshner, F. (2005). Physical activity and stress resistance: Sympathetic nervous system adaptations prevent stress-induced immunosuppression. Exercise and Sport Sciences Reviews, 33(3), 120-126.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[53] |
Berman, M. G., Jonides, J., & Kaplan, S. (2008). The Cognitive benefits of interacting with nature. Psychological Science, 19(12), 1207-1212.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[54] |
Korpela, K. M., Ylén, M., Tyrväinen, L., & Silvennoinen, H. (2009). Stability of self-reported favourite places and place attachment over a 10-month period. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 29(1), 95-100.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[55] |
Korpela, K. M., Ylen, M., Tyrvainen, L., & Silvennoinen, H. (2010). Favorite green, waterside and urban environments, restorative experiences and perceived health in Finland. Health Promotion International, 25(2), 200-209.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[56] |
Wang, X., Rodiek, S., Wu, C., Chen, Y., & Li, Y. (2016). Stress recovery and restorative effects of viewing different urban park scenes in Shanghai, China. Urban Forestry & Urban Green, (15), 112-122.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[57] |
Petersson Troije, C., Lisberg Jensen, E., Stenfors, C., Bodin Danielsson, C., Hoff, E., Mårtensson, F., & Toivanen, S. (2021). Outdoor office work–An interactive research project showing the way out. Frontiers in Psychology, 12.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[58] |
Schorr, A. V., Ayalon, L., & Tamir, S. (2020). The relationship between satisfaction with the accessibility of the living environment and depressive symptoms. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 72.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[59] |
Lawton, E., Brymer, E., Clough, P., & Denovan, A. (2017). The relationship between the physical activity environment, nature relatedness, anxiety, and the psychological well-being benefits of regular exercisers. Frontiers in Psychology, 8.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[60] |
Jiang, B., Zhang, T., & Sullivan, W. C. (2015). Healthy cities: Mechanisms and research questions regarding the impacts of urban green landscapes on public health and well-being. Landscape Architecture Frontiers, 3(1), 24-35.
|
[61] |
Gilchrist, K., Brown, C., & Montarzino, A. (2015). Workplace settings and wellbeing: Greenspace use and views contribute to employee wellbeing at penurban business sites. Landscape and Urban Planning, (138), 32-40.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[62] |
Mangone, G., Capaldi, C. A., van Allen, Z. M., & Luscuere, P. G. (2017). Bringing nature to work: Preferences and perceptions of constructed indoor and natural outdoor workspaces. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening, (23), 1-12.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[63] |
Lottrup, L., Stigsdotter, U. K., Meilby, H., & Claudi, A. G. (2015). The workplace window view: A determinant of office workers’ work ability and job satisfaction. Landscape Research, 40(1), 57-75.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[64] |
Grinde, B., & Patil, G. G. (2009). Biophilia: Does visual contact with nature impact on health and well-being? International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 6(9), 2332-2343.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[65] |
Kellert, S. R. (1997). Kinship to Mastery: Biophilia in Human Evolution and Development. Island Press.
|
[66] |
Korpela K., & Harting, T. (1996). Restorative qualities of favorite places. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 16(3), 221-223.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[67] |
Cole, L. B., Coleman, S., & Scannell, L. (2021). Place attachment in green buildings: Making the connections. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 74.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[68] |
Chaturvedi, K., Vishwakarma, D. K., & Singh, N. (2021). COVID-19 and its impact on education, social life and mental health of students: A survey. Children and Youth Services Review, 121.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[69] |
Yin, J., Zhu, S., MacNaughton, P., Allen, J. G., & Spengler, J. D. (2018). Physiological and cognitive performance of exposure to biophilic indoor environment. Building and Environment, (132), 255-262.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[70] |
Zhao, J., Wu, J., & Wang, H. (2020). Characteristics of urban streets in relation to perceived restorativeness. Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology, 30(2), 309-319.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[71] |
Wohlwill, J. F., & Harris, G. (1980). Response to congruity or contrast for man-made features in natural-recreation settings. Leisure Science, 3(4), 349-365.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[72] |
Pitt, H. (2014). Therapeutic experiences of community gardens: Putting flow in its place. Health & Place, (27), 84-91.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[73] |
Laumann, K., GÄRling, T., & Stormark, K. M. (2001). Rating scale measures of restorative components of environments. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 21(1), 31-44.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[74] |
Moulay, A., Ujang, N., Maulan, S., & Ismail, S. (2018). Understanding the process of parks’ attachment: Interrelation between place attachment, behavioural tendencies, and the use of public place. City, Culture and Society, (14), 28-36.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[75] |
Ouyang, W., Morakinyo, T. E., Ren, C., & Ng, E. (2020). The cooling efficiency of variable greenery coverage ratios in different urban densities: A study in a subtropical climate. Building and Environment, 174.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[76] |
Gorman, R. (2017). Smelling therapeutic landscapes: Embodied encounters within spaces of care farming. Health & Place, (47), 22-28.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[77] |
Hedblom, M., Knez, I., Ode Sang, Å., & Gunnarsson, B. (2017). Evaluation of natural sounds in urban greenery: Potential impact for urban nature preservation. Royal Society Open Science, 4(2).
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[78] |
Bild, E., Pfeffer, K., Coler, M., Rubin, O., & Bertolini, L. (2018). Public space users’ soundscape evaluations in relation to their activities. An Amsterdam-based study. Frontiers in Psychology.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
[79] |
Jiang, B., Xu, W., Ji, W., Kim, G., Pryor, M., & Sullivan, W. C. (2021). Impacts of nature and built acoustic-visual environments on human’s multidimensional mood states: A cross-continent experiment. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 77.
CrossRef
Google scholar
|
/
〈 | 〉 |