dc.description.abstract | High-rise living had been universally accepted as a sustainable solution to the housing
problem by the end of the 20th century. However, it invariably results in the separation
of people from nature, a fact that is especially true of users occupying the upper floors
of high-rise apartments. Consequently, such a lifestyle has long been associated with
the poor mental and physical health of their users. Sustainable high-rise buildings are,
therefore, not merely about responsivity to environmental, technical, and economic issues,
but also about the improvement of high-rise dwellers’ quality of living. Such concerns
become even more important in the context of the high-rise’s evolution as a holistically
sustainable urban dwelling of the future, due to rising real estate prices in urban areas.
It is a foregone conclusion, therefore, that the aforementioned negative influences would
also occur in the Sri Lankan context, especially since high-rise living has yet to become
entrenched in the collective conscious of her people as a viable lifestyle choice. This paper
demonstrates how the outdoor natural environment affects the mental well-being of high rise dwellers. Responses of dwellers of three different high-rise apartments in Colombo,
Sri Lanka, regarding their phenomenological experiences of how the outdoor natural
environment affected their mental well-being, were collected, and qualitatively analyzed.
The results show how the presence of visual connections to the natural environment
contribute to the mental health and well-being of high-rise dwellers. These findings have
relevance to the way user-friendly high-rise apartments that would be designed in the
foreseeable future. | en_US |