| Literature DB >> 23449281 |
Terry T-K Huang1, Dina Sorensen, Steven Davis, Leah Frerichs, Jeri Brittin, Joseph Celentano, Kelly Callahan, Matthew J Trowbridge.
Abstract
We developed a new tool, Healthy Eating Design Guidelines for School Architecture, to provide practitioners in architecture and public health with a practical set of spatially organized and theory-based strategies for making school environments more conducive to learning about and practicing healthy eating by optimizing physical resources and learning spaces. The design guidelines, developed through multidisciplinary collaboration, cover 10 domains of the school food environment (eg, cafeteria, kitchen, garden) and 5 core healthy eating design principles. A school redesign project in Dillwyn, Virginia, used the tool to improve the schools' ability to adopt a healthy nutrition curriculum and promote healthy eating. The new tool, now in a pilot version, is expected to evolve as its components are tested and evaluated through public health and design research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23449281 PMCID: PMC3592783 DOI: 10.5888/pcd10.120084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
Spatial Domains, Design Strategies, and Core Healthy Eating Design Principles, Healthy Eating Design Guidelines for School Architecture, Pilot Version, 2013
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| Articulate the kitchen area as a demonstration kitchen with an open view to food preparation stations from servery and seating zones. | 4 |
| Create dedicated display and storage areas for fresh and preserved fruits and vegetables. | 4 |
| Design freezer and refrigeration capacity to accommodate seasonally available, locally sourced food, including food from federally subsidized school programs such as Farm-to-Schools. | 1 |
| Provide kitchen equipment such as ovens, tilt skillets, and steamers that allows for a variety of cooking methods for fresh foods. | 1 |
| Avoid deep-fat fryers. | 1 |
| Provide kitchen equipment that allows for a variety of processing and preservation methods, such as canning and freezing of fresh foods. | 1 |
| Provide storage bins for a variety of whole grains and whole grain flours. | 1 |
| Provide flash-freezing capacity for fresh local foods. | 1 |
| Provide sufficient counter or work space for processing of fresh foods. | 1 |
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| Create a visual and/or physical connection to the commercial teaching kitchen, seating area, and outdoor school gardens. | 4 |
| Provide areas conducive to teaching, presentation, and demonstration cooking. | 2 |
| Create teaching kitchen as a hands-on learning environment with equipment that is safe and accessible to children. | 2 |
| Create an outdoor kitchen area conducive to traditional (historical) and experimental teaching and cooking (ie, open-fire cooking, solar oven). | 2 |
| Provide outdoor kitchen with access to potable water. | 2 |
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| Provide servery space for healthy grab-and-go meal options in the snack or express line. | 1 |
| Provide space behind the servery counter for packaged snacks to be served on request only. | 1 |
| Use mobile hot and cold servery equipment carts for flexibility and a variety of arrangements (eg, freestanding fresh salad and fruit station in seating areas). | 1 |
| Avoid servery equipment that serves exclusively competitive foods (eg, self-serve ice cream freezers). | 1 |
| Provide age-appropriate self-service food preparation stations (eg, juicing, microwaving, toasting). | 3 |
| Place healthy foods at eye level of children, and specify food service equipment that allows one to do so. | 3 |
| Include servery lines in sufficient number to ensure efficient user flow, thereby ensuring all students have adequate time to eat. Coordinate with district wellness policy. | 3 |
| Provide visual circulation cues to support efficient flow through servery areas. | 3 |
| Situate disposal areas to avoid conflicts with users entering the servery or dining areas. Arrange disposal areas along dining area exit route, when possible. | 3 |
| Provide express checkout lanes for students choosing healthy meals, with no sugary or salty products such as sweetened beverages, chips, or desserts. | 3 |
| Position servery equipment to accommodate nutritious foods (eg, broccoli) at the beginning of the server line. | 3 |
| Design space by cafeteria register to allow for display of healthy foods and minimize child access to foods high in fat and sugar. | 3 |
| Provide servery equipment that can accommodate changeable food descriptors/labels. | 3 |
| Provide servery equipment that provides space for multiple healthy choices in each food category(celery | 3 |
| Provide servery equipment with closed sides and tops when sale of less healthful options is required. (ie, ice cream). | 3 |
| Position salad bars away from walls for 360-degree circulation. | 3 |
| Position salad bars near the checkout register. | 3 |
| Provide servery counter space that can accommodate fruit bowls for serving fresh fruits and vegetables. | 3 |
| Provide space for serving trays. | 3 |
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| Create visual access between dining areas and other food spaces (eg, school garden and/or commercial kitchen). | 4 |
| Create a variety of seating options and social arrangements, recognizing that not all students will be comfortable in a given configuration. | 3 |
| Provide outdoor seating areas designed for the local climate (ie, covered or shaded, as necessary) and connected to the interior dining area. | 3 |
| Design dining areas to recognized national standard for seating capacity, to avoid overcrowding. | 3 |
| Provide comfortable seating. | 3 |
| Provide small refrigerators in every classroom, for storage of packed snacks, lunches, and beverages. | 1 |
| Provide staff refrigerators in proximity to anticipated staff eating areas. | 1 |
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| Feature fresh, preserved, or prepared food in public spaces. | 4 |
| Incorporate appealing colors and lighting. | 3 |
| Provide targeted acoustic treatments with high noise reduction coefficients in public gathering spaces such as dining areas. | 3 |
| Incorporate integrated audio capabilities that allow music to be played in selected areas. | 3 |
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| Incorporate visible and educational indicators of school (or municipal) water quality. | 4 |
| Design architectural interiors to provide dedicated space for healthy nutrition marketing (eg, corridors, stairways, servery, dining areas). | 4 |
| Provide daily/weekly/monthly menu signage at the entry to the dining area and servery zone and throughout the seating zone. | 4 |
| Provide educational (nutritional) information on food choices. Highlight information on seasonal fresh foods incorporated into the school food program. | 4 |
| Locate educational (nutritional) signage so that it is visible from the “point of choice” in the servery zone. | 4 |
| Prescreen nutritional marketing to eliminate potentially competitive foods (eg, chocolate “Got Milk?” posters). | 4 |
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| Place vending machines selling unhealthy options away from dining and primary traffic areas (visually and spatially). | 3 |
| Provide ready access to potable water and cups in dining areas. | 1 |
| Place drinking fountains in outdoor activity areas. | 1 |
| Place drinking fountains near social/public areas. | 1 |
| Provide potable water in every classroom. | 1 |
| Incorporate advanced filtration system for the school’s potable water supply. | 1 |
| Provide free potable water sources at a rate of 1 per 100 occupants. | 1 |
| Provide at least 50% water sources conducive to filling water bottles. | 1 |
| Provide storage space for refillable water containers. | 1 |
| Replace vending machine content with healthy food and beverage options. | 1 |
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| Create a school garden. | 2 |
| Create a school farming facility (producing, for example, tilapia, honey, or eggs). | 2 |
| Create a greenhouse facility for educational purposes and/or support of the school garden. | 2 |
| Use edible plantings for landscaping. | 2 |
| Include on-site food production resources (eg, garden, greenhouse) in construction documents for building facility, where possible. | 2 |
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| Provide a school wellness center readily accessible to all students, designed to support nutritional counseling, and integrated with related school functions such as the health educator or school nurse. | 4 |
| Design science laboratories conducive to food-related experiments (eg, soils laboratory). | 4 |
| Maintain a library collection dedicated to healthy eating and nutrition. | 4 |
| Design food spaces to support curricular, extracurricular, and community education. | 4 |
| Provide dedicated space for educational materials in clear view of all students. | 4 |
| Incorporate Internet access or kiosk for nutritional information and research. | 4 |
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| Design food spaces for flexibility and multiple uses by school, school affiliates, and community groups. | 5 |
| Provide community garden space for local use. | 5 |
| Provide mobile/modular units that enable rapid reconfiguration of the dining area. | 5 |
| Host community farmers’ market on school grounds. | 5 |
Core principles: 1) provide equipment and spaces that facilitate the incorporation of fresh and healthy food choices into the school and its community; 2) provide facilities to directly engage the school community in food production and preparation; 3) apply evidence- and theory-based behavioral science principles to “nudge” the school community toward healthy eating behaviors and attitudes; 4) use building and landscape features to promote awareness of healthy and sustainable food practices; 5) conceive and articulate school spaces as community assets to multiply the benefits of school-based healthy food initiatives.
Figure 1Site plan for upper and lower elementary schools in Dillwyn, Virginia.
Figure 2Floor plan for the cafeteria and kitchen for upper and lower elementary schools, Dillwyn, Virginia.
Figure 3Artist rendering of open kitchen and co-located teaching kitchen for upper and lower elementary schools, Dillwyn, Virginia.
Figure 4Integrated school garden and outdoor eating spaces for upper and lower elementary schools, Dillwyn, Virginia.