Redesigning Canada for physical distancing and COVID-19

Redesigning Canada for physical distancing and COVID-19

By Michael Onesi, Alumni Communications Officer

August 17, 2020

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People sit in circles in a park for social distancing.
Some cities are drawing circles in the grass at parks to ensure physical distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic.

As Canada slowly re-opens during the COVID-19 outbreak, urban planners and politicians are working to re-configure their cities to adjust to life with physical distancing and reduce the spread of the virus.

to space people out and closing street lanes to create a wider area for people to walk, and stores dedicating the first hour of shopping to seniors and people-at-risk are examples of society adjusting to the new reality of COVID-19.

John Meligrana (MPL鈥91), a professor in the Department of Geography and Planning, has launched a study to discover the new policies and protocols that cities have successfully adopted. The research will be compiled in a report and shared with urban planners, politicians, and municipal leaders across Canada in the fall to help them re-open their towns as safely as possible.

While the world waits for a vaccine to be found in the next year or two, public health officials say physical distancing is one of the top weapons against COVID-19. Designing how thousands of people interact within neighbourhoods, buildings, and public spaces is what urban planners do, so Dr. Meligrana hopes his report can play a role in saving lives during the pandemic.

鈥淲e are all praying for a vaccine,鈥 says Dr. Meligrana. 鈥淚 am praying for all our first responders and praying for scientists to resolve this. But in the meantime, we need to rethink how we are using our cities. How do you achieve physical distancing in Canada鈥檚 most densely populated cities? That鈥檚 the question. That鈥檚 where we can contribute.鈥

The project is being funded by Rapid Response, a Queen鈥檚 project supporting research that contributes to the development, testing, and implementation of medical or social countermeasures to mitigate the rapid spread of COVID-19.

Dr. Meligrana has hired two grad students (Claire Lee and Stephan Kukkonen) and is working with two fellow Department of Geography and Planning faculty members (Patricia Collins and Ajay Agarwal) to research and complete the report by the end of October.

They plan to look issues at related to public places (such as parks and sports fields), transportation, and vulnerable communities that have been impacted harder than affluent communities.

Dr. Meligrana is already seeing emerging trends, such as a movement toward 鈥渜uiet streets.鈥 With fewer people driving, some cities are closing roads to create more room for pedestrians. It doesn鈥檛 always work. Kingston recently closed parts of two downtown streets, . These experiences can provide valuable lessons to city planners.

鈥淲e know there are a lot of these good ideas out there,鈥 Dr. Meligrana says. 鈥淲e hope to catalogue them, package them, and share them with as many people as possible. Planners can play a big role in making communities safer.鈥

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