Commitment to Health and Equity in the Built Environment
Inspired by the desire to communicate the importance of centering health and equity in land use and real estate practice and recognizing the many ways professionals in this field can make a tangible impact, members of the Health Leaders Network have written an actionable commitment to affirm health and equity as core values of our work. The “Commitment to Health and Equity in the Built Environment” is a call to action for ULI members and nonmembers alike involved in the shaping of our cities and communities and decision-making processes tied to the built environment. We invite you to sign onto the commitment below and act today.
Select each respective dropdown menu below to learn and see more, including a list of current signatories.
Who Can Sign?
Join the Commitment
All are welcome to join the effort- individuals, firms, companies, cities, and beyond. You can sign onto the commitment by clicking the button above, and all signatories who sign up via the link will be added to the directory of signatories listed below on a regular basis.
For questions about the Commitment or the Health Leaders Network, please reach out to [email protected].
Commitment to Health and Equity in the Built Environment (Abridged)
Commitment to Health and Equity in the Built Environment
(Abridged)
We the undersigned share the capacity and responsibility to prioritize health outcomes through our work. Collectively, we will:
- Provide affordable and accessible housing, support services, health care, transportation, parks, and education;
- Provide access to high-quality air, water, and nutrition;
- Improve mental health (through stress prevention and reduction, a sense of safety, etc.);
- Promote social well-being (social connections, community cohesion, a sense of belonging);
- Encourage healthy behaviors such as physical activity (active living, walking, exercise);
- Protect or restore site-based ecologies (biodiversity and habitat, water and waste management, access to light, and sound pollution); and
- Realize environmental comfort (thermal, acoustic, visual, physical).
By acting on this commitment we will do our part to repair longstanding inequities that exist in our communities. Through our work, we will:
- Recognize the capital value of a healthy environment in the marketplace and make the case for the cost of inaction;
- Set clear and achievable health and social equity goals for each project in partnership with the communities with which we are working;
- Hold ourselves and our teams accountable for the health and social equity outcomes of our work;
- Employ evidence-based strategies and best practices to achieve these health goals;
- Partner with community stakeholders, health researchers, and clinicians as needed to improve our understanding of and dialogue with the lived experiences of a given community;
- Proactively identify unintended health impacts of our work and commit to rectifying shortcomings where they are found;
- Understand outcomes by tracking project and organizational performance against these goals;
- Continuously expand our collective knowledge base by engaging in research initiatives and collaborative partnerships and by sharing case studies in support of this work;
- Advocate for health and social equity in conversations about development and land use; and
- Bring the health and social equity lens to all ULI initiatives in which we participate.
To act on this commitment most effectively, we must understand and elevate the work of those already engaged in the communities we seek to work with, including community members, public agencies and institutions, not-for-profit organizations, and other professionals.
We will seek to build partnerships within and outside the ULI network that help promote, lead, and champion our goals and our commitment to health and social equity in our communities.
Through the work outlined above, we are committed to ULI’s mission of shaping the future of the built environment for transformative impact in communities worldwide.
Signatories
Signatories
137 real estate professionals committed to date
14 cites, companies, and firms committed to date
The following individuals, cities, and firms from across the globe have signed on to this commitment:
Americas
Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic U.S. | ||
---|---|---|
Julia Africa | Jaime Fearer | Elizabeth Nilsson |
Syed Agmal Ali | Kristen Fulmer | Erin Patterson |
Jillian R. Annunziata | William Zeh Herbig | Dominic Ramos-Ruiz |
Ramune Bartuskaite | Roger Herzog | Beth Resetco |
Stephanie Becker | Kenneth Johnson | Stephen Samuels |
Steven F. Black | Saranya Kanagaraj | Yogesh A. Saoji |
Mary Burkholder | Lida Lewis | Charles Noel Schilke |
James Carras | Christina D. Long | Peter B. Smith |
Diane Caslow | John Macomber | Ivy R. Thompson |
Erika Eitland | J. Timothy McCarthy II | Sarah Welton |
Jessica Elliott | James Neville | Emily Zhang |
Midwestern U.S. | ||
---|---|---|
Ina Anderson | Pete Fritz | Paul Mellblom |
Maggie Beckley | Arathi Gowda | Oby Nwabuzor |
Ryan P. Cambridge | Celena Green | ShoMari Payne |
Michele Crawford | Chloe Gurin-Sands | Melony Pederson |
Sonia Deal | Joseph W. Hamm | Bryan Zundel |
Joe Duffy | Ruijie Ma |
Southern U.S. | ||
---|---|---|
Tim Alcott | Patti Clare | Kathrine J. Morris |
Dr. John R. Batey | Mark Cloud | Michelle M. Morrison |
Michael Bloom | Lisa Cutshaw | Luis Nieves-Ruiz |
Natasha Brand | Jim Durrett | Katrina Johnson Norris |
Lindsay Brereton | TeMaya Eatmon | Ashley Disher Spinks |
J. Keith Brown | Daniella Flanagan | Wendy Staten |
Melanie Brown | Lance Gilliam | Nellie S. Sullivan |
Monique Brown | Eric Hoke | Richard Taylor |
Rex Cabaniss | Michael King | Laura Thomas |
Rogean Cadieux-Smith | Stuart Levin | Gail Vittori |
Reverend James L. Caldwell | Stacey Levine | Jane Futrell Winslow |
Tahirah Campbell | Brian Lomel |
Western U.S. | ||
---|---|---|
Eddie Arslanian | Ed Hernandez | Treasure Sheppard |
Bernadette Austin | Hannah Hobbs | Melani Smith |
Kathryn Carrie Barkhurst | Lori Holleran | Yann Taylor |
Jeri Brittin | Todd Kohli | Meg Thorley |
Amanda Burnham | Doug Lamson | Laura Unrein |
Hafsa Burt | Piers MacNaughton | Jerome Unterreiner |
Lisa K. Clark | Bill Mahar | Ayako Utsumi |
Kathryn Gardow | Sandra Miller | Andrew Watkins |
Cristina Greavu | Victoria Oestreich | Marja Williams |
Beatriz Guerrero Auna | Cory Paul | Debra Wyatte |
Philip Hart | Paula Reeves |
Canada | ||
---|---|---|
Rebecca Hollister | Lisa Prime | |
Jesse Klimitz | Berjit Takhar |
Europe
Germany | ||
---|---|---|
Dr. Lena Reiß | Alvaro Valera Sosa |
The Netherlands | ||
---|---|---|
Frans van Vuure |
United Kingdom | ||
---|---|---|
Ben Cave | Warren Lever | Sophie Taysom |
Michael Chang | Graham Marshall | Eime Tobari |
Tim Chapman | Silviu Pirvu | |
Simon Hamilton | Soraiya Salemohamed |
Asia Pacific
China | ||
---|---|---|
Kelly Mai |
New Zealand | ||
---|---|---|
George Weeks |
Singapore | ||
---|---|---|
Anupam Yog |
Cities, Companies, and Firms
Worldwide | ||
---|---|---|
ARRC Capital Partners, LLC | DLR Group | Optimal Cities Ltd |
BDP | FitzGerald Associates Architects | Prosocial Place |
BHL Building Health Lab | Healthy Parks Healthy Person TN | SAFE Diversity Communities |
City of Maple Heights, Ohio | Keyah Consulting | SPAHG |
Coalition of Community Organizations | Mend and Considerate Urbanism |