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'A fantasy to get employment around the area': Long commutes and resident health in an outer urban master-planned estate

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 03:29 authored by Larissa Nicholls, Katherine PhelanKatherine Phelan, Cecily MallerCecily Maller
The Selandra Rise master-planned estate (MPE) in Melbourne's south-east growth corridor was designed to create a "healthy and engaged community" through the provision of parks, physical activity opportunities and community facilities. A 5 year longitudinal study researched the impact on residents. Over one third of residents spent 2 to 3 h per day commuting and high levels of dissatisfaction with commutes were found. Longer commute times were associated with poor physical activity and weight outcomes. The paper concludes that provisions for health and wellbeing within an MPE are insufficient when opportunities for local employment are limited and broader locational, connectivity and transport disadvantages are not addressed.

History

Journal

Urban Policy and Research

Volume

36

Issue

1

Start page

48

End page

62

Total pages

15

Publisher

Informa

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 Editorial Board, Urban Policy and Research

Former Identifier

2006072397

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-01-31

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