City Know-hows
Target audience
Those responsible for regulating minimum space standards and housing regulations, such as government departments with responsibilities for housing or health, and city mayors.
The problem
While there is substantial research on how a lack of space and poor-quality housing adversely affects wellbeing, stronger evidence is needed to determine internal space standards and support in making them mandatory. In England, current minimum space standards are based on numerical values and fail to acknowledge a broader more inclusive range of uses and activities of the home.
What we did and why
We conducted online survey and semi-structured interviews with London residents in 2021. We wanted to understand how people used and experienced their home and how this might have changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. We were interested in what changes people had made to better meet their needs, and how the quality and design of their domestic space affected their physical and mental wellbeing. This research aims to address the evidence gap between wellbeing and architectural design.
Our study’s contribution
We found how people’s wellbeing was affected, both positively and negatively, due to the design and quality of their homes:
The agency to make changes at home mattered.
Changing socio-spatial relationships led to a shift in understanding issues such as privacy and safety.
Dwelling size became even more problematic during the lockdowns.
Perceptions and dwelling preferences changed for many participants. Many had not previously been aware of the effect of design and quality of their homes on their wellbeing.
Impacts for city policy and practice
To improve housing quality and design, the following policy recommendations should be considered:
Making minimum space standards mandatory across all tenures and sectors and giving greater flexibility in the distribution of floor space to meet them.
Adding to the existing technical evidence though studies focussing on lived experiences and actual use of home.
Acknowledging the need to include a wider range of home uses and household compositions for housing provision and design standards.
Making access to outdoor space compulsory.
Further information
Laboratory for Design and Machine Learning – The Home, the Household, and COVID-19
Full research article:
The impact of housing design and quality on wellbeing: lived experiences of the home during COVID-19 in London by Lucia Alonso & Sam Jacoby
Related posts

Thailand has spent 16 years developing design guidelines for the elderly and people with disabilities. Still, accessible design for cognition remains inadequate for the impending super-aged society. This mismatch emphasises a critical failure in design planning that demands urgent improvement.

Social sustainability entails improving quality of life by addressing basic human needs, promoting well-being, and creating supportive communities. Our approach prioritizes the inclusion of human needs in neighborhood design to enhance the overall quality of a neighborhood’s physical environment.

As emerging challenges have made urban areas increasingly vulnerable, jeopardizing the health and well-being of their inhabitants, resilience should be seen as a pathway for healthy cities and integrated into urban planning practices. This study shows if and how existing indicator frameworks can identify urban systemic vulnerabilities and priorities for resilience building to provide local authorities with evidence crucial in planning for healthy and resilient cities.