San Pablo Corridor

Sections

San Pablo Corridor
Location California
Organization Human Impact Partners

The HIA addressed a decision about where to locate affordable housing along a high-traffic transit and retail corridor in Richmond and El Cerrito, California. The HIA was done in conjunction with a planning process for revitalization of the corridor. Pathways and health issues explored included neighborhood "health assets" (e.g., parks, trails, community centers, schools, transit and retail diversity) and "health liabilities" (e.g., air pollution, noise, collisions and concentrated poverty) for potential residents of affordable housing. Among the HIA‘s recommendations were: increasing space for healthy retail and public services, such as full-service grocery stores; offering reduced-cost transit passes to residents, incentives for car-share memberships and car-share parking; joint-use agreements with local schools; improved park maintenance and security to improve safety; a new public elementary school; increased access to existing community and senior centers; bike lanes, traffic calming features and pedestrian-level lighting; housing-design strategies for reducing air and noise impacts; indoor ventilation and filtration systems for removing air pollutants; mixed-income housing developments; and a living wage offered by local employers.

A letter from Human Impact Partners coalition partners to City Council and city staff included health-based recommendations and is currently being considered.

More Information

Organization Website:

http://www.humanimpact.org

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The Health Impact Project’s toolkit contains resources that help communities, agencies, and other organizations take action to improve public health. The toolkit offers a collection of health impact assessments, guides, and other research to support policymakers’ efforts to consider health when making decisions across sectors, such as housing, planning, and education.

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At A Glance
  • Status:
    Completed
  • Publication date:
    2009
  • Decision-making levels:
    Regional
  • Sectors:
    Community development, Housing
  • Additional topic areas:
    Planning, Schools, Siting
  • Drivers of health:
    Access to healthy food, Clean air and water, Noise, Safe, affordable, and healthy housing, Safe street infrastructure
  • Affected populations:
    Economically disadvantaged
  • Community types:
    Urban
  • Research methods:
    Primary research, Qualitative research
  • Funding source:
    Other funding