Where Trees are Planted, Communities Grow

Where Trees are Planted, Communities Grow

Silver-Lake-062

Aaron led this group of volunteers in the Spring 2008 Northern Addition neighborhood community tree planting.

Residential common areas with trees and other greenery help to build strong neighborhoods. In a study conducted at a Chicago public housing development, residents of buildings with more trees and grass reported that they knew their neighbors better, socialized with them more often, had stronger feelings of community, and felt safer and better adjusted than did residents of more barren, but otherwise identical, buildings.

How can we explain this link between landscaping and stronger ties between residents and their neighborhood? When the spaces next to residences are green, they are both more attractive and more comfortable, drawing people to them. Such settings support frequent, friendly interaction among neighbors–the foundation of neighborhood social ties. These ties are the heart of a neighborhood’s strength, encouraging neighbors to help and protect each other. Sharing resources with and depending upon neighbors may be especially crucial to impoverished inner-city families, so it is especially important to plant and maintain trees in such neighborhoods.

The information here is from the original scientific article: Kuo, F.E., Sullivan, W.C., Coley, R.L., & Brunson, L. (1998). Fertile ground for community: Inner-city neighborhood common spaces. American Journal of Community Psychology, 26(6), 823-851.