24 Aug 2023, Φ♣ Sustainable Urban Health: Exploratory US trip 2023 – travel notes

24.8.2023, Sustainable Urban Health: Exploratory US trip 2023 – travel notes

With the recent US trip, 30 April – 28 May 2023, multiple goals were pursued. A strong focus was to engage in professional exchange on sustainable and equitable Urban Health / Die kürzlich durchgeführte USA-Reise, 30.4.-28.5.2023, verfolgte mehrere Ziele. Dabei lag ein ausgeprägter Schwerpunkt auf dem Fachaustausch zu nachhaltiger und gleichberechtigter StadtGesundheit.

The first half of the trip was conducted on behalf of the University of Bielefeld’s Urban Health project „Building bridges“, with working days focussing on Sustainable Urban Health. This is documented in a set of ppt slides containing descriptive, low-processed travel notes. The slides reflect my itinerary and my institutional contacts; the contents of the slides are based on publicly accessible information / Die erste Reisehälfte erfolgte im Auftrag des Projektes „Brückenbau“ der Universität Bielefeld; die Arbeitstage waren dem Thema Nachhaltige StadtGesundheit gewidmet. Dies ist dokumentiert in einem Satz von ppt-Folien mit deskriptiven, wenig bearbeiteten Reisenotizen. Die Folien spiegeln meine Reiseroute und meine institutionellen Kontakte; die Folieninhalte basieren auf öffentlich zugänglichem Material.

The second part of the trip (weeks 3 and 4) was privately funded. Nevertheless, among other activities, it included site visits and personal exchange concerning Sustainable Urban Health. Informations obtained here were merged with those from the first two weeks / Der zweite Reiseteil (Wochen 3 und 4) war privat finanziert. Gleichwohl gab es auch hier Ortsbesuche und persönlichen Austausch zum Thema Nachhaltige StadtGesundheit. Die hier erhaltenen Informationen flossen in die Reisenotizen ein.

For visual impressions of the complete trip (c. 30 posts) / Für visuelle Eindrücke der Gesamtreise (ca. 30 Einträge), cf. 28 May 2023.

The travel notes are largely bi-lingual; the set of slides is structured as follows / Die Reisenotizen sind großenteils zweisprachig angelegt; der Foliensatz gliedert sich wie folgt:

1. Exchange goals, priority topics, travel concept / Austauschziele, Hauptthemen, Reisekonzept

2. New York City, 1-4 May, incl. institutional contacts; selected sites visited

  • 2.1 NY Applied urban epidemiology / Angewandte Stadtepidemiologie
  • 2.2 NY Healthy ageing / Gesundes Altern
  • 2.3 NY Urban green & blue; incl. landscape architecture
  • 2.4 NY Other topics / Weitere Themen
  • 2.5 NY Networking Lunch

3. San Francisco Bay Area, 8-11 May, incl. institutional contacts; selected sites visited

  • 3.1 SF Bay Area – City development and health, incl.City of Richmond (CA) HiAP process
  • 3.2 SF Bay Area – Urban green & blue / Stadtgrün/-blau
  • 3.3 SF Bay Area – Mobility: SF Bay Area Trail
  • 3.4 SF Bay Area – Other topics / Weitere Themen

4. International issues; selected references; acknowledgement / Internationales; Literaturauswahl; Danksagung

  • 4.1 International Society for Urban Health (ISUH), with 19th International Conference on Urban Health
  • 4.2 Academies and Urban Health
  • Selected references / Literaturauswahl
  • Acknowledgment (personal contacts & digital exchange) / Danksagung (persönliche Kontakte & digitaler Austausch).

All the information at hand, including these travel notes as well as personal communications received, is currently being used to summarize the results and insights achieved so far, to draw conclusions, and then to develop recommendations for future exchange on Sustainable Urban Health / Alle vorliegenden Informationen, einschließlich dieser Reisenotizen sowie persönlicher Mitteilungen, werden momentan genutzt, um die bisher erzielten Ergebnisse und Erkenntnisse zu formulieren, entsprechende Schlüsse zu ziehen und dann Empfehlungen für den weiteren Austausch über Nachhaltige StadtGesundheit herzuleiten.

On this occasion, it is gracefully acknowledged that the Fritz and Hildegard Berg Foundation at the German Foundation Center supports the project „Building bridges“ / Für die Förderung des Projektes „Brückenbau“ sei der Fritz und Hildegard Berg-Stiftung im Deutschen Stiftungszentrum auch an dieser Stelle gedankt.

17 Jul 2023, Φ Save the date – 9. Konferenz „Stadt der Zukunft“, 21.-22.11.2023 in Bonn: Therapeutische Stadtlandschaften unter Stress

17.7.2023, Save the date – 9. Konferenz „Stadt der Zukunft – Gesunde, Nachhaltige Metropolen“, 21.-22.11.2023 in Bonn: Therapeutische Stadtlandschaften unter Stress. Bestandserhaltung, Entwicklungschancen und Verdrängungsrisiken in einer Welt des Wandels.


Für Aktualisierung: siehe 12.10.2023.


Die Konferenz wird Plenar- und Parallelforen zu den Themen Demographie, Digitalität, Klimawandel und Biodiversität umfassen; sie will sich u.a. mit folgenden Fragen befassen:

  • Welche Chancen bieten therapeutische Landschaftselemente der grün-blauen Infrastruktur, aber auch des gebauten Stadtraums, um Stressoren resilienter entgegenzutreten?
  • Welche gesundheitlichen Risiken drohen … im urbanen Wettstreit um Flächen und Ressourcen …?
  • Wie verhält sich das Konzept der Therapeutischen Landschaften zum Naturbegriff? … Welche Potenziale bietet das Konzept für die urbane Praxis …?
  • Mit welchen … Instrumenten der Stadtentwicklung können therapeutische Landschaften gesichert und gestärkt werden?

Konferenzveranstalter sind Prof. Dr. Thomas Kistemann und Dr. Timo Falkenberg, GeoHealth Centre, Institut für Hygiene & Public Health, Universitätsklinikum Bonn. Die Konferenz wird von der Fritz und Hildegard Berg-Stiftung gefördert und erfolgt in Kooperation mit dem Programmbeirat. Für weitere Informationen siehe hier:

Vgl.:

  • 9.11.2022: 8. Konferenz Stadt der Zukunft, Essen
  • 26.10.2022: Zur 8. Konferenz Stadt der Zukunft
  • 17.-18.11.2021: 7. Konferenz Stadt der Zukunft / Digitale Tandemkonferenz “Nachhaltige StadtGesundheit“
  • Zur Konferenzserie auf der Projekt-Website, deutsch und englisch.

28 May 2023, Φ ♣ USA trip Overview / Überblick

28.5.2023, USA trip Overview / Überblick

With this trip, multiple goals were pursued, incl. a strong focus on Urban Health professional exchange / Mehrfachfunktion dieses Trips, inkl. ausgeprägtem Schwerpunkt auf Fachaustausch zu StadtGesundheit

[Post-script: For overview and descriptive travel notes / Nachtrag: Für Überblick und deskriptive Reisenotizen, cf. 24 Aug 2023]

Posts / Einträge:

Cf. former US travel and topics / frühere US-Reisen und -Themen:

  • 3.-4.9.2012, San Francisco Beat poets
  • 2.9.2012, San Francisco: Party Day
  • 21.8.-7.9.2012, California
  • 28.8.-15.9.2008, USA: California
  • 28.-30.4.1999, IEEI, San Francisco: Conference “The Environmental Health Effects of Civil Unrest”
  • 4.-20.12.1993, San Francisco & Bay Area: Healthy Cities conference, Cal-EPA, ATSDR group, etc.
  • 8.-11.12.1993, San Francisco: 1st International Healthy Cities and Communities conference, incl. EIA/HIA session
  • 6.-7.12.1993, San Francisco, Preconference: Healthy Cities Communications Toolbox Summary
  • 3.7.-16.8.1993, Multi-purpose trip to California / Mehrzweckreise nach Californien
  • 1988-1991 Almanac – Episource
  • (1985-1988: 20+ posts)
  • 18.8.-2.9.1984, Vancouver (IEA Meeting) – SF Bay Area – Los Angeles
  • 1984ff California connection

19-21 May 2023, Φ Esalen Retreat and Institute (Big Sur)

19.-21.5.2023, Φ Esalen Retreat and Institute (Big Sur)


Esalen Institute, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esalen_Institute: … a non-profit … retreat center and intentional community in Big Sur, California, which focuses on humanistic alternative education … played a key role in the Human Potential Movement beginning in the 1960s. Its innovative use of encounter groups … and their … experimentation in personal awareness introduced many ideas that later became mainstream … founded by Michael Murphy and Dick Price in 1962 … to support alternative methods for exploring human consciousness … Over the next few years, Esalen became the center of practices and beliefs that make up the New Age movement, from Eastern religions/philosophy, to alternative medicine and mind-body interventions, from transpersonal to Gestalt Practice … Alan Watts gave the first lecture at Esalen in January 1962 … Abraham Maslow, a prominent humanistic psychologist, … happened to drive into the grounds and … became an important figure at the institute … Early leaders included … Ansel Adams, … Buckminster Fuller, Timothy Leary, … Linus Pauling, Carl Rogers, … B.F. Skinner, and Arnold Toynbee … In 1964, Joan Baez led a workshop entitled “The New Folk Music”… Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Allen Ginsberg, … Gary Snyder and others held poetry readings and workshops.


On the way to Esalen: Bixby bridge.


Excerpt: Jeffrey J Kripal, Glenn W. Shuck (eds.) (2005): On the edge of the future. Esalen and the evolution of American culture. Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, USA:

  • (pp.1ff Introducing Esalen) p.6: two Esalen … mantras – „No one captures the flag“ and „We hold our dogmas lightly“ …
  • (pp.45ff Catherine L. Albanese: Ch. 2, Sacred (and secular) self-fashioning: Esalen and the American transformation of Yoga) p.73: … when the …Institute opened its doors in 1962, it took to heart its mission of exploring the „human potential“ …
  • (pp.165ff Gordon Wheeler: Ch. 6, Spirit and shadow: Esalen and the Gestalt model) p.170 … founding of two of the most remarkable … and alternative projects of those times. One was the Esalen Institute … in 1962 … The other was the Gestalt model of psychotherapy, first articulated by Frederick (Fritz) Perls and Paul Goodman … in the early postwar period … the Gestalt approach would continue to color (and be colored by) the development of the Institute over the next several decades … p.172 Gestalt… is the psychology of constructivism … p.194 … the urgent task at hand: the co-creation of a sustainable, livable world …
  • (pp. 197ff Robert C. Fuller: Ch. 7, Esalen and the cultural boundaries of metalanguage) p.208 … Attending Esalen links one to a community that spans generations – a community including Native Americans, beatniks, literati, and countercultural rebels … pp.211-214 Carl Rogers … Esalen connections …
  • (pp. 250ff Don Hanlon Johnson: Ch. 9, From Sarx to Soma: Esalen’s role in recovering the body for spiritual development) p.256 … Esalen was in some ways like a Wild West version of the 1920s German Bauhaus … p.260 … Esalen’s role … is due in part to its extraordinary natural beauty … p.265 … unique … place on the edge of the Western world that is closer to Kyoto than to Athens …
  • (pp. 268 ff Marion S. Goldman: Ch. 11, Esalen Institute, essence faiths, and the religious marketplace) p.268 Esalen brings together essence faiths from both eastern and western spiritual traditions. These religions do not have deities who reveal ultimate truths … Instead, … posit ephemeral … supernatural essences within individuals and, in some traditions, … in the natural world … p.287 … consider Esalen as a spiritual retreat, think tank, and pilgrimage center and as an example of … personal growth centers … p.287-288 Informal exchanges link Esalen with … the California Institute of Integral Studies … p.292 Landscape is Esalen’s keystone …

10 May 2023 ff, Φ ♣ Richmond (Contra Costa County, CA), inkl. Pogo Park

10.5.2023 ff, Φ ♣ Richmond (Contra Costa County, CA), inkl. Pogo Park

Richmond, CA – A multifaceted city:

  • Overview (below)
  • Internationally recognized for its „Health in All Policies“ approach (below), incl. cases study „Pogo Park“, in the Iron Triangle
  • Point Richmond, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_Richmond,_Richmond,_California: … Originally a tiny village known as East Yards …, Point Richmond was Richmond’s central downtown area from the late 19th century until the early 20th century, when the present downtown superseded it as the busiest part of town. Since then, its trademark “mom-and-pop” shops have largely survived … Point Richmond Historic District …
  • Richmond Bay Trail, www.pointrichmond.com/bay-trail/: Richmond has completed over 36 miles of San Francisco Bay Trail – far more than any other city on this planned 500-mile multi-purpose trail …
  • Point Pinole, cf. 23.5.2023 (post = forthcoming)
  • SF Bay: Risk assessment-based fish consumption advice, cf. 23.5.2023
  • UCB Richmond Field Station, cf. 6.5.2023, University of California, Berkeley (UCB) campus

Richmond, CA, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richmond,_California: … a city in western Contra Costa County … in the San Francisco Bay Area’s East Bay region … population … 116,448 as of the 2020 census … The Ohlone were the first inhabitants …, settling an estimated 5,000 years ago … At the onset of World War II, … four … Shipyards were built along Richmond’s waterfront, employing thousands of workers, many migrating to Richmond from other parts of the country after being recruited …When the war ended the shipyard workers were no longer needed … a decades-long population decline ensued … By 1960 much of the temporary housing built for the shipyard workers was torn down … In the 1970s, the Hilltop area was developed in Richmond’s northern suburbs, further depressing the downtown area as it drew retail clients and tenants away to the large indoor Hilltop Mall, which opened in 1976 … In 2006, the city celebrated its centennial. This coincided with the … streetscaping project of Macdonald Avenue … designated the city’s “Main Street District” by the state of California … The city has in the past suffered from a high crime rate … By 1991, the city’s all-time high of 62 homicides … was seven times the national average … In 2007, Richmond opened a program to prevent gun violence, the Office of Neighborhood Safety … The program … analyzes public records to determine “the 50 people in Richmond most likely to shoot someone and to be shot themselves.” It … offers selected individuals “a spot in a program that includes a stipend to turn their lives around” … Richmond is no longer ranked as a “most dangerous” city, in either California or the United States … … There are 17 emergency warning sirens in the city … tested on the first Wednesday of every month, at 11 am, [e.g., 3 May 2023] and are usually used to warn of toxic chemical releases from the Chevron Richmond Refinery … annual … Cinco de Mayo celebrations … attracts thousands …The Richmond Police Department, Fire Brigade, United States Marine Corps and other organizations participate in the parade …

Health In All Policies: Iron Triangle Case Study, www.transparentrichmond.org/stories/s/Iron-Triangle/f84x-aghg: The Iron Triangle neighborhood … within the City of Richmond …is bounded by three major railroad tracks: the Union Pacific Railroad/BART tracks …; the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway tracks …; and the Richmond Greenway … 61% Hispanic residents, 25% Black residents, 8% Asian residents, and 7% white residents. Few residents have completed associate’s, bachelor’s, or more advanced degrees, although many have completed high school and some college. Historically, poverty rates in the Iron Triangle have been significantly higher … Due to being a historically disadvantaged community, Iron Triangle residents face many community stressors including violence, blight, lack of green space, and more, which affect health outcomes … Founded by a Richmond resident in 2007, Pogo Park is a community organization focused on transforming lives and opportunities by working side by side with neighborhood residents to create, program and operate public spaces. The organization got its initial start as one of the first projects that emerged from the City of Richmond’s Health Element of the General Plan. This project was the renovation of the Elm Playlot in Richmond’s Iron Triangle neighborhood. The park was a common location for drug dealing … considered unsafe, and inaccessible to residents. Through a set of mixed engagement strategies … residents came up with a new vision … to transform the small park into an anchor public space in the middle of their neighborhood – the heart of the community … Pogo Park also submitted a successful $6.2 million grant to Caltrans to build the first leg of the “Yellow Brick Road” (a project to build safe streets in the Iron Triangle for children to walk and bike) … will connect Elm Playlot directly to Harbour-8 Park, giving local children a safe, clean and green pathway to walk or bike to and from the two parks … Pogo Park Products … is a social enterprise that creates handcrafted play environments for children and also employs people who live in the Iron Triangle community … Since 2007, Pogo Park has hired more than 100 Iron Triangle residents and invested over $16 million in the community … Yellow Brick Road – The idea … was conceived in 2009 by youth from the Iron Triangle as a project that would deploy thematic symbols on roads and sidewalks to designate safe walking routes and connect community key assets … recieved a $6.2 million Caltrans grant to built the first section of the Yellow Brick Road in the Iron Triangle and $4.1 million California Natural Resources Agency grant to build green infrastructure. Construction began … in June 2021 …

Health in All Policies, www.ci.richmond.ca.us/2575/Health-in-All-Policies: The City has implemented a variety of programs and strategies to adopt a Health in all Policies approach following a community development process in 2012. To track ongoing progress toward health equity, improve community awareness and benefits from HiAP, and broaden the scope and depth of beneficial impacts on population health, the City Manager’s Office published the Health in All Policies Landing Page on Transparent Richmond, the City’s open data website, in October 2022 … [incl.] Health in All Policies open data webpage … key findings of the most recent Progress Report … recommended next steps …