DIALOG contributes to framework on community well-being

by nithya_caleb | July 19, 2018 10:21 am

Visual concept of The Community Wellbeing Framework, a guide to design for community well-being published by Design firm DIALOG and The Conference Board of Canada. Image courtesy CNW Group/DIALOG[1]
Visual concept of The Community Wellbeing Framework, a guide to design for community well-being published by design firm DIALOG and The Conference Board of Canada.
Image courtesy CNW Group/DIALOG

Design firm DIALOG[2] and The Conference Board of Canada[3] (CBoC) have published a framework[4] to help design and development professionals understand the impact of their project design decisions on community well-being.

The report “Community Wellbeing: A Framework for Design Professions[5]” is made up of five domains, 18 indicators, and 48 metrics. The domains—social, cultural, environmental, economic, and political—represent the dimensions of life that can affect a community’s well-being. The indicators are the aspects of each domain determining the presence or absence of community well-being. Each indicator is informed by a series of quantifiable and qualifiable metrics that are relevant across different scales and context.

Some questions asked by the framework include:

“Having a framework upon which our industry can define and evaluate the built environment’s contributions to community well-being empowers conversations toward a shared vision and actionable decision-making,” says Antonio Gómez-Palacio, principal at DIALOG. “Co-ordinating our approach in the design industry will support all members of a community—the public sector, the private sector, and individual groups—in finding common ground, a shared vision, and sense of purpose to design physical environments, first and foremost, in the interests of community well-being that has tangible value.”

The research initiative was proposed by DIALOG in 2016 to more accurately align the firm’s project work with their mission to improve the well-being of communities and the environments they share. The result of the two-year research is an open-ended and self-determined guide accessible for free with the invitation to share feedback and experiences to allow CBoC and DIALOG to continue to explore the benefits of designing for community well-being.

The framework also provides business case application with demonstrable return on investment (ROI) to design for community well-being in workplace, academic, hospital, retail, and residential settings. To download the report, click here[6].

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.constructioncanada.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/DIALOG_DIALOG_and_The_Conference_Board_of_Canada_release_The_Com.jpg
  2. DIALOG: http://www.dialogdesign.ca/
  3. Conference Board of Canada: https://www.conferenceboard.ca/?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1
  4. framework: http://www.dialogdesign.ca/community-wellbeing
  5. Community Wellbeing: A Framework for Design Professions: http://www.dialogdesign.ca/community-wellbeing
  6. here: http://www.dialogdesign.ca/community-wellbeing

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