The covenant "Building a Healthy Neighborhood" has been signed by a broad coalition of parties for the long-term monitoring of health and well-being in the Cartesius Utrecht area development.
A broad coalition of parties, including academia, businesses, and government, have joined forces to measure how area development can contribute to improved health. The Cartesius consortium, composed of area developers Ballast Nedam Development and MRP, along with the Municipality of Utrecht, NS Stations, UMC Utrecht, Utrecht University, Utrecht University of Applied Sciences, Housing Corporation Portaal, Achmea Real Estate, and CBRE Investment Management, have signed the "Building a Healthy Neighborhood Covenant." This covenant lays the foundation for collaboration to measure interventions in the built environment and innovations in healthcare aimed at positively influencing residents' health.
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International First
Cartesius Utrecht will be the first area development where health will be measured in collaboration with science. This will be done through an integrated approach with knowledge partners, local government, businesses, and healthcare institutions, in coordination with the agenda of the HealthHUB Utrecht and the Data and Knowledge Hub for Healthy Urban Living. During the trade mission of the Economic Board Utrecht (EBU) in Copenhagen, the World Health Organization (WHO) pledged to include Cartesius Utrecht in the "Health in the Well-Being Economy" program as part of the "WHO Healthy Cities."
Measuring Interventions for Better Health in Area Development
Over the next 5 to 10 years, interventions will be implemented in the Cartesius Utrecht area development to measure the health and social well-being of residents. The effects of these interventions will be measured to determine which actions work best. The goal is to learn from these interventions, share acquired knowledge to make healthcare and design innovations more widely applicable, and establish targeted health interventions. The ambition of the parties involved is to scale up the monitoring program to more locations in the Netherlands.

