Neighborhood Air Quality, Respiratory Health, and Vulnerable Populations in Compact and Sprawled Regions

Journal of the American Planning Association, 76(3): 363-371, 2010

By: American Planning Association National, Jiangping Zhou, Lisa Schweitzer

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01944363.2010.486623
Report a broken link

Built Environment and Health

This article asks whether air quality outcomes are better in compact regions than in sprawled regions. It concludes that ozone concentrations are lower in compact regions, but that residents, especially minority and low-income residents, experience greater ozone exposure. Planners must consider how compact development leads to inequitable air quality, not just emissions reduction.