37 results match your criteria: "Bartlett School of Architecture[Affiliation]"

Matrix scenario-based urban flooding damage prediction via convolutional neural network.

J Environ Manage

October 2023

School of Geographical and Remote Sensing, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou, 510006, China. Electronic address:

This study introduces a cutting-edge, high-resolution tool leveraging the predictive prowess of convolutional neural networks to advance the field of hazard assessment in urban pluvial flooding scenarios. The tool uniquely accounts for the high heterogeneity of urban space and the potential impact of complex climate scenarios, which are often underestimated by traditional data-reliant methods. Employing Shenzhen as a case study, the model showcased superior accuracy, resilience, and interpretability, illuminating potential flood hazards.

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Towards equal neighborhood evolution? A longitudinal study of soundscape and visual evolution and housing value fluctuations in shenzhen.

J Environ Manage

November 2024

School of Landscape Architecture, Beijing Forestry University, No. 35 Qinghua East Rd., Haidian Dist., Beijing, 100083, China.

Article Synopsis
  • The study examines how neighborhood environments in Shenzhen are affected by housing economics and focuses on residents' perceptions of these areas, using long-term street view imagery to gather data.
  • It identifies disparities during neighborhood renewals, showing that areas with better soundscapes often have lower visual perception scores, highlighting spatial inequality between urban and suburban regions.
  • The findings suggest that residents are becoming more aware and sensitive to both audio-visual aspects of their neighborhoods, seeking richer experiences, while also providing a new quantitative method for assessing neighborhood perceptions that could be applied globally.
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Article Synopsis
  • Extreme meteorological events and urbanization have caused significant urban flooding issues, prompting the need for better assessment methods of flooding susceptibility in densely populated areas.
  • This study introduces a novel framework combining machine learning techniques (XGBoost, SHAP, and PDP) with K-means clustering to accurately evaluate urban flood risks related to city design and rainfall conditions.
  • Results show that urban morphology significantly influences flooding, with specific conditions—like building density and floor area ratios—potentially reducing flood risks, highlighting the importance of strategic urban planning.
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High streets have been shown to be central to socio-economic activity, given their diverse residential, leisure, and commercial activities. This study explores the link between adolescent social isolation and proximity to, and land use mix in, high streets. Hypothesising that greater distance from high streets might increase social isolation, measured via social activities, friend contact frequency, and social support, we used multilevel modelling with data from the Millennium Cohort Study.

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Probiotic Cities: microbiome-integrated design for healthy urban ecosystems.

Trends Biotechnol

August 2024

The Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London, Gordon Street, London, WC1H 0QB, UK.

Combining microbiome science and biointegrated design offers opportunities to help address the intertwined challenges of urban ecosystem degradation and human disease. Biointegrated materials have the potential to combat superbugs and remediate pollution while inoculating landscape materials with microbiota can promote human immunoregulation and biodiverse green infrastructure, contributing to 'probiotic cities'.

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In this paper, we explore the mutual effect of prior background expectations and visibility afforded by the 3D configuration of the physical environment on wayfinding efficiency and strategy in multilevel buildings. We perform new analyses on data from 149 participants who performed six unaided and directed wayfinding tasks in virtual buildings with varying degrees of visibility. Our findings reveal that the interaction between visibility and prior background expectations significantly affects wayfinding efficiency and strategy during between-floor wayfinding tasks.

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The crux of building and planning standards for age-friendly built environment in all countries resides in the regulation of age-friendly built environment practices, yet there exist variations in the representation of content dimensions. The UK is distinguished by its discretionary approach to guidance, whereas China exhibits a highly controlled disposition. Control and guidance may appear to be antithetical, it is essential to recognize that the building and planning standards for age-friendly built environment in both countries never deviate from the legal constraints while providing guidance in achieving age-friendly environments, thus striking a delicate balance between control and guidance.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how feeling safe in one's neighborhood affects physical activity levels in adolescents, as both subjective feelings of safety and objective crime rates play a role.
  • Data was collected from over 10,900 participants in the UK, analyzing self-reported safety and crime statistics against their reported physical activity levels.
  • Findings show that feeling unsafe or living in high-crime areas correlates with reduced physical activity, suggesting that neighborhood safety is a crucial factor in promoting adolescent health.
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Environmental exposures (EE) are increasingly recognised as important determinants of health and well-being. Understanding the influences of EE on health is critical for effective policymaking, but better-quality spatial data is needed. This article outlines the theoretical and technical foundations used for the construction of individual-level environmental exposure measurements for the population of a northern English city, Bradford.

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A Survey of the Landscape Visibility Analysis Tools and Technical Improvements.

Int J Environ Res Public Health

January 2023

College of Architecture and Urban Planning, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou 510006, China.

Visual perception of the urban landscape in a city is complex and dynamic, and it is largely influenced by human vision and the dynamic spatial layout of the attractions. In return, landscape visibility not only affects how people interact with the environment but also promotes regional values and urban resilience. The development of visibility has evolved, and the digital landscape visibility analysis method allows urban researchers to redefine visible space and better quantify human perceptions and observations of the landscape space.

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Exploration of dynamic human activity gives significant insights into understanding the urban environment and can help to reinforce scientific urban management strategies. Lots of studies are arising regarding the significant human activity changes in global metropolises and regions affected by COVID-19 containment policies. However, the variations of human activity dynamics amid different phases divided by the non-pharmaceutical intervention policies (e.

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Predictive maps in rats and humans for spatial navigation.

Curr Biol

September 2022

Institute of Behavioral Neuroscience, Department of Experimental Psychology, Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, University College London, London, UK. Electronic address:

Much of our understanding of navigation comes from the study of individual species, often with specific tasks tailored to those species. Here, we provide a novel experimental and analytic framework integrating across humans, rats, and simulated reinforcement learning (RL) agents to interrogate the dynamics of behavior during spatial navigation. We developed a novel open-field navigation task ("Tartarus maze") requiring dynamic adaptation (shortcuts and detours) to frequently changing obstructions on the path to a hidden goal.

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Environmental Justice in Greater Los Angeles: Impacts of Spatial and Ethnic Factors on Residents' Socioeconomic and Health Status.

Int J Environ Res Public Health

April 2022

Space Syntax Laboratory, The Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London, London WC1H 0AY, UK.

Environmental justice advocates that all people are protected from disproportionate impacts of environmental hazards. Despite this ideal aspiration, social and environmental inequalities exist throughout greater Los Angeles. Previous research has identified and mapped pollutant levels, demographic information, and the population's socioeconomic status and health issues.

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Street-level built environment factors, for example, walking infrastructure, building density, availability of public transport, and proliferation of fast-food outlets can impact on health by influencing our ability to engage in healthy behaviour. Unhealthy environments are often clustered in deprived areas, thus interventions to improve the built environments may improve health and reduce inequalities. The aim of this review was to identify whether street-level built environment interventions can improve children's health in high income countries.

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Given the links between the built environment and loneliness, there is interest in using place-based approaches (addressing built environment characteristics and related socio-spatial factors) in local communities to tackle loneliness and mental health problems. However, few studies have described the effectiveness, acceptability, or potential harms of such interventions. This review aimed to synthesize the literature describing local community-based interventions that target place-based factors to address loneliness and mental health problems, informing the development of future public health approaches.

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Social and political policy, human activities, and environmental change affect the ways in which microbial communities assemble and interact with people. These factors determine how different social groups are exposed to beneficial and/or harmful microorganisms, meaning microbial exposure has an important socioecological justice context. Therefore, greater consideration of microbial exposure and social equity in research, planning, and policy is imperative.

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Although the built environment (BE) is important for children's health, there is little consensus about which features are most important due to differences in measurement and outcomes across disciplines. This meta-narrative review was undertaken by a multi-disciplinary team of researchers to summarise ways in which the BE is measured, and how this links to children's health. A structured search of four databases across the relevant disciplines retrieved 108 relevant references.

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The impact of the physical workplace on behaviors and attitudes at work is a much-studied topic. Major research streams over the last decades investigated either satisfaction with offices in relation to physical comfort, or how layout decisions influenced interaction and collaboration in the workplace with a focus on open-plan offices. Rather little is known on the effect a workplace layout (such as its openness) has on perceptions of staff regarding teamwork, focused work and perceived productivity.

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Soft Office: a human-robot collaborative system for adaptive spatial configuration.

Constr Robot

March 2021

Institute for Computational Design and Construction, University of Stuttgart, Keplerstrasse 11, 70174 Stuttgart, Germany.

The Soft Office project was developed in response to the rapidly changing context of commercial architecture, where accommodating fluid programmatic requirements of occupants has become key to sustainable interior space. The project is placed within a broader context of relevant research in architectural robotics, in situ robotic fabrication, and adaptive and reconfigurable architecture. It establishes a methodology for spatial configuration through the implementation of a custom collaborative robotic interior reconfiguration system.

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Microbiome-Inspired Green Infrastructure: A Toolkit for Multidisciplinary Landscape Design.

Trends Biotechnol

December 2020

Healthy Urban Microbiome Initiative (HUMI), London, UK; School of Biological Sciences and the Environment Institute, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, 5005, Australia.

Incorporating recent advances in environmental microbiome research and policy is a major challenge for urban design. We set out a framework for managing construction projects so that multidisciplinary teams of researchers and practitioners can explicitly consider environmental microbiota in design and construction contexts, thereby increasing ecosystem functionality and public health.

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Effects of the Musical Sound Environment on Communicating Emotion.

Int J Environ Res Public Health

April 2020

UCL The Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London (UCL), London WC1H 0QB, UK.

The acoustic environment is one of the factors influencing emotion, however, existing research has mainly focused on the effects of noise on emotion, and on music therapy, while the acoustic and psychological effects of music on interactive behaviour have been neglected. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the effects of music on communicating emotion including evaluation of music, and d-values of pleasure, arousal, and dominance (PAD), in terms of sound pressure level (SPL), musical emotion, and tempo. Based on acoustic environment measurement and a questionnaire survey with 52 participants in a normal classroom in Harbin city, China, the following results were found.

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Handheld and wearable devices are becoming ubiquitous in our lives and augmented reality technology is stepping out of the laboratory environment and becoming ready to be used by anyone with portable devices. The success of augmented reality applications for pedestrians depends on different factors including a reliable guidance system and preventing risks. We show that different guidance systems can be supplementary to provide directions to a point of interest and offer clues that help the user find the augmented data when they get close to the location they have to visit.

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A bioprinting technique for large-scale, custom-printed immobilization of microalgae is developed for potential applications within architecture and the built environment. Alginate-based hydrogels with various rheology modifying polymers and varying water percentages are characterized to establish a window of operation suitable for layer-by-layer deposition on a large scale. Hydrogels formulated with methylcellulose and carrageenan, with water percentages ranging from 80% to 92.

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Economic, physical, built, cultural, learning, social and service environments have a profound effect on lifelong health. However, policy thinking about health research is dominated by the 'biomedical model' which promotes medicalisation and an emphasis on diagnosis and treatment at the expense of prevention. Prevention research has tended to focus on 'downstream' interventions that rely on individual behaviour change, frequently increasing inequalities.

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