Urban

green space exposure associated with improved social participation

Exact: 0.14

Urban green spaces are associated with improved social participation in older adults and those with dementia (effect size 0.14)

Among the four key outcome areas examined — individual ability, social interaction, mental stress, and emotional health — social participation showed a positive effect size of 0.14. This suggests that green spaces, especially community gardens, encourage social interaction among older adults and people living with dementia.

The specific performance of these green spaces is as follows: reduced incidence of dementia (-0.06), improved social participation (0.14), increased physical isolation (0.54), reduced anxiety (-0.28), relieved depression, relieved mental disorders (-0.32), calmed agitation (-0.06), increased positive emotions (0.10), reduced sadness and anger, improved quality of life, enhanced cognitive function (0.52), and improved sleep.
Yixin Zhang et al., 2025, Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews

Machine-extracted, quote-verified. Report an error

Related findings

Read more in

Glass towers rising from densely planted concrete terraces at the Parkroyal Collection Pickering in Singapore Urban
03 Urban

Singapore's green mandate, sixty years in

Mandatory greening raises developer costs before it differentiates assets, and the most cited showcase numbers come from the architects themselves.

10 Jun 2026 · 11 min · 29 sources

More from The Built Review

Silhouette of a person sitting at a floor-to-ceiling window with a view over Potsdamer Platz in Berlin 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.

10 Jun 2026 · 12 min · 14 sources
All reports

← All findings