Exploring the influence of urban art interventions on attraction and wellbeing: an empirical field experiment

Author(s)
Margot Dehove, Jan Mikuni, Nikita Podolin-Danner, Martin Karl Moser, Bernd Resch, Linda Dörrzapf, Pia Marlena Böhm, Katharina Prager, Helmut Leder, Elisabeth Oberzaucher
Abstract

While cities are attractive places, brimming with opportunities and possibilities for their inhabitants, they have also been found to have negative consequences, especially on physical and mental health. In a world of ever-growing urban populations, it is important to understand how to make cities healthier and more pleasant places to live. In the present study, we investigated the impact of art as an urban intervention and compared it to the well-known effects of greenery (i.e., plants and vegetation) in an identically framed intervention. Specifically, we looked at how people engage with a Graetzloase (a type of parklet) and its embedding urban environment in terms of visual and spatial attraction as well as wellbeing. The Graetzloase displayed either abstract art or greenery and was placed on two distinct streets that, among other elements, also contained art and greenery. Our field study captured the ongoing experiences during people’s exploration of the urban environment by employing mobile eye-trackers and physiological devices. While our findings demonstrated a certain level of visual and spatial attraction towards the Graetzloases, it was not as pronounced as initially anticipated. Nevertheless, our analyses still inform on What decorating element should be placed in a Graetzloase, as well as Where to implement the Graetzloase. Our results suggest that artistic elements are more visually attractive (i.e., they were looked at for longer times) than the greenery, and that both visual and spatial attraction towards the Graetzloases are greatly impacted by the street context. We found that the Art Graetzloase when displayed in a wide street containing greenery elements, is visually more present in the participant’s visual field than all the other experimental combinations. The more precise analyses of the participant viewing behavior confirm this trend. Regarding wellbeing, we found no evidence for the impact of street context or the types of decorations in the Graetzloases. Our results establish an initial empirical foundation for the design and placement of not only future parklets but also urban art interventions in general.

Organisation(s)
Vienna Cognitive Science Hub, Department of Cognition, Emotion, and Methods in Psychology, Faculty of Life Sciences, Department of Behavioral and Cognitive Biology
External organisation(s)
Paris-Lodron Universität Salzburg, Harvard University, Interdisciplinary Transformation University Austria, Technische Universität Wien
Journal
Frontiers in Psychology
Volume
15
No. of pages
19
ISSN
1664-1078
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1409086
Publication date
12-2024
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
501001 General psychology
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
General Psychology
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/16303019-e3db-461f-8f4f-9b6b274cf782