Topic Menu
► Topic MenuTopic Editors
Biophilic Cities and Communities: Towards Natural Resources, Environmental and Social Sustainability
Image courtesy of TE Dr. Xin-Chen Hong
Topic Information
Dear Colleagues,
Biophilic design is a design philosophy that encourages the use of natural and sustainable systems to enhance the built environment at multiple scales (e.g., building, site, city and regional) (Gillis and Gatersleben, 2015). Currently, and with increasing frequency, a host of biophilic programs, policies and initiatives are being developed in many cities, facilitating natural resources conservation and environmental and social sustainability in the built environment. The increasing trend demonstrates that biophilic perspectives on cities and communities have profound connotations worthy of further exploration. Nevertheless, enhancing the built environment to create biophilic cities and communities is still challenging.
Thus, we propose the topic, “Biophilic Cities and Communities: Towards Natural Resources, Environmental and Social Sustainability”. It is expected to bring together researchers who are working on related topics and encourage them to share their latest accomplishments and research findings. We welcome submissions of original research articles, reports or technical notes, reviews and mini-reviews covering topics including but not limited to the following.
(i) Biophilic urbanism and processes
- Smart cities and communities
- Land use/cover change
- Spatial-temporal trends
- Geodesign
- Urban landscape pattern
- Bioclimatic design
- Sustainable urban-rural planning
- Built environment assessment
(ii) Natural resources conservation and management
- Urban ecosystem
- Ecological pattern and process
- Environmental education and policies
- Protected areas
- Forest management
- Edible landscaping
- Nature-based solutions
- Green sites and regions
(iii) Computational social science and human behavior
- Environmental behavior and local practice
- Experience in multi-sensory interaction
- Social and historical sensing
- Public health and green exercise
- Mental health and wellbeing
- Economic and cultural sustainability
- Big data and cognitive computing
Gillis, K., Gatersleben, B., A review of psychological literature on the health and wellbeing benefits of biophilic design, Buildings, 2015, 5(3):948–963.
Dr. Xin-Chen Hong
Prof. Dr. Baojie He
Prof. Dr. Jiang Liu
Dr. Jinda Qi
Dr. Guangyu Wang
Dr. Shi Cheng
Topic Editors
Keywords
- environment assessment
- bioclimatic design
- remote sensing
- human behaviour and health
- social sensing
- green building
- urban ecosystem
- land-use policy
- resource management
- big data
- sustainability
Participating Journals
Journal Name | Impact Factor | CiteScore | Launched Year | First Decision (median) | APC |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Buildings
|
3.1 | 3.4 | 2011 | 17.2 Days | CHF 2600 |
Forests
|
2.4 | 4.4 | 2010 | 16.9 Days | CHF 2600 |
Land
|
3.2 | 4.9 | 2012 | 17.8 Days | CHF 2600 |
Remote Sensing
|
4.2 | 8.3 | 2009 | 24.7 Days | CHF 2700 |
Smart Cities
|
7.0 | 11.2 | 2018 | 25.8 Days | CHF 2000 |
Sustainability
|
3.3 | 6.8 | 2009 | 20 Days | CHF 2400 |
Preprints.org is a multidiscipline platform providing preprint service that is dedicated to sharing your research from the start and empowering your research journey.
MDPI Topics is cooperating with Preprints.org and has built a direct connection between MDPI journals and Preprints.org. Authors are encouraged to enjoy the benefits by posting a preprint at Preprints.org prior to publication:
- Immediately share your ideas ahead of publication and establish your research priority;
- Protect your idea from being stolen with this time-stamped preprint article;
- Enhance the exposure and impact of your research;
- Receive feedback from your peers in advance;
- Have it indexed in Web of Science (Preprint Citation Index), Google Scholar, Crossref, SHARE, PrePubMed, Scilit and Europe PMC.