The value of establishing and maintaining green spaces within communities is a message that continues to gain momentum. Aside from the economic value a well-maintained lawn and home or business landscape provides, new research shows that turning vacant lots into attractive green spaces may actually make life less stressful.
A study conducted by the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and published in the American Journal of Public Health, indicates that people in two Philadelphia neighborhoods who wore heart rate monitors when they went for walks saw a reduction in heart rate when they walked by a lot that underwent “greening” – cleaning, debris removal, planting grass and trees, and installing a low wooden post- and rail-fence.
“The reduction we found suggests a biological link between urban blight reduction strategies like vacant lot greening and reductions in stress,” said Dr. Eugenia South, the lead author of the study.
For the rest of the article, posted on Project EverGreen's blog, click here.
Latest from Lawn & Landscape
- New Holland's Workmaster 35C and Workmaster 40C compact tractors
- Hittle Landscaping acquires Calvin Landscape in Indianapolis
- Agri-Fab 60-gallon sprayer
- Mullin names Scott Miller as COO
- Schill Grounds Management acquires Begonia Brothers Services, Atlas Outdoor
- Lawn & Landscape announces keynote for Technology Conference
- The Harvest Group opens registration for virtual series on compensation strategies
- Granum, Weathermatic enter multi-year strategic partnership