>40%
majority of park users visit multiple times per week
Exact: over 40%
Over 40% of urban park users in Delhi visit three or more times per week
In a survey of 411 users across five urban parks in Delhi, more than 40% reported visiting three or more times per week. This high visitation frequency suggests these blue-green spaces serve as routine, everyday environments rather than occasional leisure destinations, supporting their role as core neighbourhood infrastructure in a high-density megacity.
BGS appeared to function as an essential neighbourhood, with over 40% visiting three or more times per week.
Related findings
RCT sample size for VR-based stress recovery study
Study enrolled 100 participants in a 2×2 VR experiment on traffic noise and stress recovery
Tongfei Jin et al., 2026, Buildings
50 of 2,816
very few published papers directly examine interior office space and employee health
Only 50 out of 2,816 papers examined the link between interior office space and employee health
Susanne Colenberg et al., 2020, Building Research & Information
+16%
occupants in cleaner neighborhoods rated cleanliness satisfaction noticeably higher
Occupants in cleaner neighborhoods rated neighborhood cleanliness satisfaction 6.2 vs 5.33 for dirtier neighborhoods
Isabelle Y.S. Chan et al., 2018, Building and Environment
Read more in
Housing What an insecure home does to people
Britain abolished no-fault eviction. The evidence reads it as a health intervention, and the market decides who it reaches.
Healthcare
Healthcare Built to Wake: How Hospital Noise and Light Undermine Patient Sleep
Of the two environmental levers on inpatient sleep, noise control is the better proven and the cheaper, while tunable lighting for the general ward is the one the evidence does not yet support.
More from The Built Review
Workplace Pricing biophilia: what the evidence is worth
Read at the primary sources, the business case for nature in buildings is narrower than advertised and strong enough to act on.
Workplace Germany's missing indoor-air bill
France, Britain and Australia have priced bad indoor air. Germany's missing number is a political choice, not a methodological limit.
Housing What insurers don't ask about buildings
Health insurers price age, tobacco and zip code. Building quality is in no model, and the law is only half the reason.