The Urban Developer
AdvertiseEventsWebinarsUrbanity
Industry Excellence
Urban Leader
Sign In
Membership
Latest
Menu
Location
Sector
Category
Content
Type
Newsletters
A one-day deep dive on office, retail, healthcare, childcare and alternative sectors
UPCOMING | COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE SUMMIT
LEARN MOREDETAILS
On Demand

Fireside Chat | Inside GemLife With Adrian Puljich

Building Australia's Newest Airport: Multiplex

The Makers Of The Mondrian | Design, Vision And Delivery Behind One Of Australia’s Most Anticipated Luxury Hotels

Next Gen Now | How Emerging Developers Are Redefining The Game

View All >
Latest News
Office

Off-Market Newstead Site Deal Breaks Land Rate Record

Taryn Paris
2 Min
The Urban Developer Industrial and Logistics Summit 2025
Exclusive

Keeping the Lights On: Growing Pains Jeopardise Industrial Boom

Vanessa Croll
8 Min
Finance

Coposit Expands to WA with Linic Group Partnership

Partner Content
5 Min
Office

Historic Midland Workshops Site Listed for Sale

Lindsay Saunders
2 Min
View All >
Events
Lunch

Women’s Leadership Lunch

Summit

Commercial Real Estate Summit

Summit

Urban Leader Awards

One-Day Course

Property Development Masterclass Series

View All >
TheUrbanDeveloper
Follow
About
About Us
Membership
Awards
Events
Webinars
Listings
Resources
Terms & Conditions
Commenting Policy
Privacy Policy
Republishing Guidelines
Editorial Charter
Complaints Handling Policy
Contact
General Enquiries
Advertise
Contribution Enquiry
Project Submission
Membership Enquiry
Newsletter
Stay up to date and with the latest news, projects, deals and features.
Subscribe
SHARE
3
print
Print
OtherEditorial DeskFri 17 Mar 23

Live, Learn, Thrive: Why 15-Minute Cities are Better for All

15 min city

The idea of the 15-minute city, according to its originator Carlos Moreno, is that people are no more than a 15-minute walk or bike ride away from all the services they need to live, learn and thrive.

The idea is appealing in its simplicity: it puts people and the environment at the centre of urban planning. It involves building new urban centres and restructuring existing ones to ensure the services people need for work, food, health, education, culture and leisure are all close by—a walk or bike ride from home.

Key elements are the proximity of necessities; local participation and decision-making, community solidarity and connection, and green and sustainable urban living.

This re-imagining of local living is quickly going global. Its proponents are many and growing, and the idea is being applied on big city stages. Most notably, the 15-minute city was a feature of Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo’s successful re-election campaign in 2020.

The United Nations has hailed the 15-minute city as a means by which cities can emerge from Covid, as well as reduce the damaging dependence on cars. The potential to promote mental health and wellbeing is significant.

Enter the conspiracists


In 2023, though, conspiracy theories and protests have threatened to drown out the discussion of such positives.

How did that happen? By finding itself sitting at the centre of debates about Covid living, climate change and car-centric societies, the 15-minute city has become a focal point of attention for those who imagine more sinister motives are at work.

Conspiracists have spouted misdirected fears of the forced loss of cars, the creation of locked urban zones people cannot leave, and government surveillance and control.

null
▲ Having access to open spaces such as parks is central to the 15-minute city concept.

These notions were even raised recently in the UK parliament. Conservative MP Nick Fletcher called the 15-minute city an “international socialist concept” that “will cost us our personal freedom”.

Mental health and wellbeing


In fact, personal and community freedom, by way of giving people back meaningful time currently lost to commuting and other travel, is exactly what Moreno and proponents of 15-minute cities are focused on.

In their drive to grow, cities tend to push people, the environment and their health to the periphery. Through their sprawl, Moreno argues, cities take away freedom by taking time and disconnecting their inhabitants from services and each other.

Importantly, these effects increase the risks to people’s mental health. Moreno wants us to move away from fracturing our living into “inhuman bigness”, and towards planning that focuses on what access to services, local connection and community means for the wellbeing of people and communities.

This is why the 15-minute city presents a great opportunity for better mental health.

Long commuting times and the stressors of traffic congestion, road conditions and punctuality are linked to declines in subjective measures of mental health and wellbeing for workers. The benefits of reducing these stressors could be immediate.

Physical activities such as walking and cycling are also widely understood to benefit mental health, as does exposure to natural, green spaces. Creating local spaces for leisure and play is vital for children and parents alike.

null
▲ Physical activities such as walking and cycling improve mental health.

But, deeper than that, we need cities and urban spaces purposefully designed to promote mental health in ways that are globally recognised as impactful and essential. This process involves improving a range of social and environmental factors for individuals and community.

Covid sharpened focus on wellbeing


Lessons learned from Covd lockdowns have sharpened global understanding of the mental health crises and harm done to people’s wellbeing by loneliness, social isolation and disconnectedness.

These conditions damage the wellbeing of communities too, by fostering stigma and promoting exclusion.

We need to move quickly towards ways of living that promote connection, inclusion and healthy communities and environments. We can achieve these goals through participation, local decision-making and sustainable ecologies.

Imagine cities with accessible housing, work and education. Imagine cities with mental health service where the focus is on inclusion, participation, connection and equitable access.

Where health workers and essential services are local and available, with minimal obstacles. Imagine mental health service that is threaded through the community in meaningful, impactful ways—where every square metre is considered for its potential to improve health and wellbeing.

Mental health, wellbeing and recovery require social connection, inclusion and accessible health services. These are, without doubt, key factors in achieving better mental health. And the 15-minute city could be the template for its delivery.



Authors

Christopher Patterson
Senior Lecturer, School of Nursing, University of Wollongong

Lance Barrie
Research Fellow, ARC Centre of Excellence for the Digital Child, University of Wollongong

ResidentialInternationalWollongongPlanningArchitecturePlanningOpinion
AUTHOR
Editorial Desk
More articles by this author
TOP STORIES
The Urban Developer Industrial and Logistics Summit 2025
Exclusive

Keeping the Lights On: Growing Pains Jeopardise Industrial Boom

Vanessa Croll
8 Min
Exclusive

What’s Driving Pro-invest Push into ‘Underserved’ Micro-Apartments

Taryn Paris
6 Min
Sud-slingers are back in action in 2025, with the Sydney market recovering after years of disruption.
Exclusive

Sydney Pub Market Rebounds After Post-Covid Lows

Patrick Lau
5 Min
Gelephu Mindfulness City: Bhutan how a city of the future is planned
Exclusive

Bhutan’s Mindfulness Masterplan Resetting How Cities Work

Renee McKeown
8 Min
Long Bay Correctional hero
Exclusive

Time to Rethink: Fresh Bid to Unlock Prison’s Prime Site for Homes

Clare Burnett
7 Min
View All >
Article originally posted at: https://www.theurbandeveloper.com/articles/15-minute-cities-mental-health