Problem, research strategy, and findings:
Supportive built environments for walking are linked to higher rates
of walking and physical activity, but little is known about this
relationship for socioeconomically disadvantaged (e.g., low-income and
racial/ethnic minority) populations. We review 17 articles and find that
most show that the built environment has weaker effects on walking and
physical activity for disadvantaged than advantaged groups. Those who lived
in supportive built environments walked more and were more physically active
than those who did not, but the effect was about twice as large for
advantaged groups. We see this difference because disadvantaged groups
walked more in unsupportive built environments and less in supportive built
environments, though the latter appears more influential.
Takeaway for practice:
Defining walkability entirely in built environment terms may fail to
account for important social and individual/household characteristics and
other non–built environment factors that challenge disadvantaged
groups, including fear of crime and lack of social support. Planners must be
sensitive to these findings and to community concerns about gentrification
and displacement in the face of planned built environment improvements that
may benefit more advantaged populations. We recommend five planning
responses: Recognize that the effects of the built environment may vary by
socioeconomics; use holistic approaches to improve walkability; expand
walkability definitions to address a range of social and physical barriers;
partner across agencies, disciplines, and professions; and evaluate
interventions in different socioeconomic environments.
Support for policies to enable active transportation is higher where relevant investments in active transportation infrastructure are large (>$1.6 M), public transit is nearby, and respondents drive >2 h/d.
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