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Why I am excited to co-chair the 2022 EDRA 53 conference in Greenville, SC

May 19, 2021

Image by Faequa Uniza Rahman

By Anjali Joseph

The Environmental Design Research Association came into being in the 1960s, led by a group of forward-thinking activists and environmental design researchers who believed that architects and designers held a social responsibility to create environments that supported human behavior and intentions, well-being and performance for everyone. This highly multi-disciplinary and inclusive community includes psychologists, social science researchers, architects, landscape architects, interior designers, design researchers and students with a range of interests and focus areas. EDRA members represent many different countries and are leaders in the field of environment and behavior studies, evidence-based design, facility evaluation methods, sustainability, active living, participation, community planning, universal design, diversity in design, workplace design and informatics, design education, and digital technologies. Anyone interested in engaging in conversation around the design of the physical environment and its impacts on human behavior and performance has a home in the EDRA community.

I first attended EDRA in 2003 as a doctoral student at Georgia Tech. I vividly recall standing nervously in front of my poster during a session at EDRA. I remember the many friendly EDRA members who stopped by to provide words of encouragement and advice. At another EDRA conference, at the urging of my advisor Craig Zimring, I organized a workshop session on active living for environments for aging. With Craig’s support, I was able to recruit many leading EDRA researchers including Habib Chaudhury, Atiya Mahmood, Benyamin Schwarz and Gerald Weisman. As I found then and it continues to be the case, the EDRA community is generous in sharing their knowledge and willing to mentor and support young students and early career professionals. These interactions and countless others at EDRA helped me gain confidence as a speaker and researcher and helped me make connections that have served me well during my career.

EDRA creates so many opportunities for students and professionals to enrich their careers and expand their knowledge about environmental design, just like it did for me as a student. The values and philosophy of EDRA resonates with so much of what we do at the Clemson School of Architecture and the Center for Health Facilities Design and Testing. For all these reasons and many more, Clemson University and EDRA 53 co-chairs (Dina Battisto, B.D. Wortham- Galvin and I) are deeply honored and excited to be hosting the 53rd Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA) Annual Conference in 2022 in Greenville, SC!

The theme of the 2022 conference is Health in all Design: Promoting health, equity, sustainability and resilience through environmental design. As we emerge from a global pandemic, it has become imperative that environmental designers and researchers consider health – a state of complete physical, social and mental well-being over time – as a critical goal for all design projects. The pandemic has highlighted the importance of the built environment in promoting safe and healthy lifestyles by providing access to outdoors and green areas for physical activity, good air quality and building layouts that support hygienic practices indoors, and ergonomic design that promotes wellness in workplaces. The pandemic has also highlighted stark inequalities – black, indigenous and people of color (BIPOC) communities have been disproportionately impacted in terms of mortality, illness and unemployment. Providing access to safe and affordable housing, healthcare and health-promoting resources has never been more critical for these communities. Greenhouse gas emissions resulting from human activity including transportation, building construction and operation are contributing to climate change, and future designs should not only impact individual and community health but also help improve planetary health. Inclusive of sustainability and cities’ abilities to help sustain diverse environments, cultures, and economies locally and globally, resiliency which implies the ability of a community to anticipate and recover from challenges is needed now more than ever before. Through ‘Health in all Design’, EDRA 53 will bring together a multidisciplinary community of practitioners and researchers to engage in a conversation about the role of built environment in promoting health, equity, sustainability and resilience as we move beyond the pandemic.

Greenville is a prime example of our proposed theme: Health in all Design. Through an engaged public private partnership, the city of Greenville was revitalized to include a range of health-promoting community resources including walking and biking trails and parks such that it is listed among the 10 most livable cities in the US. Further, the city plans to implement smart city concepts in the near future to support health and well-being of its residents. Clemson University’s College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities (CAAH) and its allied programs that are encompassed by EDRA – landscape architecture, city planning, historic preservation, architecture and health, and resilient urban design – are deeply engaged in conversations locally and globally around health, equity, sustainability and resilience. The Interdisciplinary Ph.D. program in Planning, Design and the Built Environment (PDBE) in CAAH also includes a concentration in Built Environment and Health. The graduate program in Architecture + Health at Clemson focuses on studying how architectural environments impact health and how to create architectural settings that support the health and well-being of individuals and larger populations. The Master’s program in Resilient Urban Design (MRUD) prepares individuals to engage complex cultural, market, and government policy forces through sustainable and resilient urban form. Further, we integrate professional degree programs and research programs to foster lively discussions around blending design, theory and practice. The focus of these programs as well as the broader mission of the landscape architecture and architecture programs at Clemson align well with the goals of EDRA and the theme of this conference.

This proposed theme invites abstracts that focus on research, projects, methods, and designs that envision a safer and healthier post-pandemic world. Thus, the theme will manifest in various session tracks that might include:

Health, Equity, Resilience and Sustainability: How are we generating knowledge to address the great challenges of the time, like: public health issues, an increasingly digital society, climate change, social inequities, overpopulation, stewarding tangible and intangible heritage, an increase in both waste and pollution (soil, air, noise, water), natural resource depletion, access to affordable housing, access to food and water, loss of biodiversity, loss of cultural diversity, urban sprawl, etc.? How do we rely upon simultaneity and adjustability to manage these challenges both locally and globally?

Designing for Diverse Populations: How are we considering the needs of post-pandemic? What impacts did our buildings, communities and natural environments have on vulnerable populations including children, ethnic minorities, young adults, the elderly, people with mental disorders, people with physical disabilities during the pandemic? How will the lessons learned during the pandemic shape the design of future environments for diverse populations?

Designing for Health: How do design and planning professionals approach and define health and well-being as a core part of their practice? How does it affect their methods? What are the emerging design tools (data, simulation, virtual) and how are they being deployed in design projects?

Activism & Advocacy: What are the methods, conversations, and outcomes for those researching and designing under the auspices of design activism, action research, public service, and public education? We encourage not only success stories but also critical discussions of pitfalls and “failures” that serve as learning opportunities for this work.

Trans-disciplinary: How are professionals and academics crossing boundaries to address emerging issues of health, equity, sustainability and resilience in a post-pandemic world? What are the means for doing this? What critiques emerge when blurring and/or borrowing from multiple disciplines?

Pedagogies/Methods: What are the ways in which teaching promotes design and research excellence, innovation, and/or activism? What methodologies are being embraced by environmental design faculty in order to innovate and stimulate their research? How are emerging design tools (data, simulation, virtual, etc.) being used in the classroom and/or in research?

Join us June 1-4, 2022 to discover more about ‘Health in all Design’ and what we can learn from experts in environmental design. EDRA holds a special place in my heart and I am very excited to bring EDRA to Greenville and Clemson. To get involved with EDRA events, explore publications, and expand networking opportunities click here.