1. Urban design attributes and resilience: COVID-19 evidence from New York City.
- Author
-
YANG YANG, YIHONG LI, KRAL, KATHARINA, HUPERT, NATHANIEL, and DOGAN, TIMUR
- Subjects
URBAN planning ,COVID-19 pandemic ,EQUALITY ,URBAN ecology - Abstract
This paper juxtaposes existing public policies and different planning paradigms with evidence from the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City (NYC). Zip code tabulation area (ZCTA) data for NYC are used to address four main questions: (1) How do urban density and crowding affect infection rates? (2) How does the commuting environment relate to pandemic resilience? (3) How does the allocation of points of interest within a city impact the infection rate? (4) How do evident inequalities in a city influence vulnerability during a pandemic? The presented evidence is used to demonstrate that compact, well-mixed, and decentralized cities can increase pandemic resilience due to advantageous features such as short commute times and well-distributed points of interest. At the architectural level, more resilient apartment building typologies need to be developed to mitigate the ramifications of overcrowding. This analysis also reveals significant spatial disparities and how they disproportionally affect the pandemic risk of the vulnerable communities. These findings warrant a broader discussion on how urban design and planning can mitigate inequalities and transform cities into a resilient, inclusive, and sustainable urban environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF