The result D5 “Human-centered built environment design for improving health and well-being” addresses a crucial gap: the need to explicitly integrate human health and well-being metrics into existing design guidelines for the built environment, especially in the context of climate change.

The core of D5 is a redefined framework of tools and guidelines developed through a multi-faceted and co-creative process (desk reviews, partner engagement, and KPI integration). While many tools focus on Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for building resilience, they often lack a holistic approach that equally considers the occupants’ physical, mental, and social well-being. 

The primary tool is a refined set of recommendations that takes the format of practical guidelines and advice for architects, engineers, occupants, and policymakers. Its functions include providing effective design strategies to promote human resilience; structuring recommendations across three key well-being dimensions (Physical, Mental, and Social) and offering a robust evaluation mechanism. 

The tool is currently a finalized set of guidelines ready for application, which is accessible in D2.5.

The target user group includes local policymakers, urban planners, communities, investors, developers, architects, and occupants, essentially anyone involved in the building industry concerned with both the environment and human health. 

The tool contributes to solving their need by offering a clear, actionable methodology to design spaces that explicitly support: 

  • Physical Well-being: Encouraging activity, maintaining optimal indoor environmental quality (temperature, air, light), and reducing fatigue. 
  • Mental Well-being: Incorporating natural elements, providing flexibility and privacy, and improving mood/cognitive function through natural light and ventilation. 
  • Social Well-being: Promoting social capital and combating loneliness by creating spaces that encourage positive, informal social interaction and inclusion (universal design). 

For real-world testing, the human health and well-being aspects will be tested in the Italian demo site (Camerino), focusing on assess the impact of interventions on people’s health and well-being. This result will directly feed into the broader MULTICLIMACT toolkit, offering a human-centric layer that complements other tools.  

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