Green and blue settings as providers of mental health ecosystem services: Comparing urban beaches and parks and building a predictive model of psychological restoration
Landscape and Urban Planning 204 : (2020) // Article ID 103926
Abstract
Urban beaches and parks are providers of numerous ecosystem services. In the cultural sphere, place bonding
and psychological restoration might significantly contribute to the health and well-being of citizens. In this
manuscript, we present a study aimed to evaluate the extent to which three urban beaches and three urban parks
offered these advantages to a sample of users (n = 429) in the city of Donostia-San Sebastián (Spain). A second
aim was to build a predictive model of restoration through both objective and subjective measures. We assessed
the design and physical features of the settings using the Natural Environment Scoring Tool (NEST) and gathered
a range of information about the users via a paper & pencil questionnaire. The survey included socio-demographics,
questions regarding the frequency and patterns of use, and four different psycho-environmental scales:
Perceived Restorativeness Scale (PRS), Place Attachment and Identification Scale, and Restoration Outcome
Scales (ROS). We found differences regarding the profile of users and the activities carried out in each of the
settings. Users of beaches reported higher levels of attachment, identification, and experienced restoration than
the participants surveyed in urban parks (p < .001). Regression analyses revealed that the main predictors of
experienced restoration where perceived restorativeness (β = 0.49), attachment (β = 0.22), and identification
(β = 0.15), whereas the physical/design features of the environment and the routines of use made a negligible
contribution in this regard. The results of the regression analyses were extended by conducting dominance and
relative weight analyses.