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Perceived place qualities, restorative effects and self-reported wellbeing benefits of visits to heritage sites: empirical evidence from a visitor survey in England

Perceived place qualities, restorative effects and self-reported wellbeing benefits of visits to heritage sites: empirical evidence from a visitor survey in England
Perceived place qualities, restorative effects and self-reported wellbeing benefits of visits to heritage sites: empirical evidence from a visitor survey in England
Heritage sites are complex environments that cannot be easily be located within a nature – built space dichotomy. Although a small but growing body of evidence supports the potential of visits to heritage sites in generating wellbeing benefits, there is a gap in understanding how such benefits may be related to the perceived qualities or affordances of heritage sites. We present an exploratory survey instrument designed and tested to generate empirical evidence on the association between the qualities of heritage sites, the restorative effects of a heritage visit, and the extent to which these are positively associated with self-reported subjective wellbeing benefits. The survey was given to sample of 780 visitors to 7 heritage sites in England from June to October 2020. Factor analysis of responses led to extraction of 3 core components related to how participants evaluated their experience of the qualities of place, and 2 core components linked to the restorative effects of the visit. Using these core components to create composite variables, regression models were fitted to understand which qualities of place and effects of the visit predict self-reported wellbeing benefits. The results suggest that different components of heritage sites may contribute to increase in positive affect and reduction in anxiety elements of wellbeing. They suggest potential therapeutic benefits of visits to heritage sites for self-directed visits, and thus potential means of sustainably delivering support for public wellbeing at scale.
Attention Restoration Theory, Heritage sites, Restorative effects, Subjective wellbeing
2666-5581
Gallou, Eirini
ffea3b32-195f-492f-a1b6-e2dc185cad63
Uzzell, David
102755f1-f396-4e72-b3bc-efe792c07a2b
Sofaer, Joanna
038f9eb2-5863-46ef-8eaf-fb2513b75ee2
Gallou, Eirini
ffea3b32-195f-492f-a1b6-e2dc185cad63
Uzzell, David
102755f1-f396-4e72-b3bc-efe792c07a2b
Sofaer, Joanna
038f9eb2-5863-46ef-8eaf-fb2513b75ee2

Gallou, Eirini, Uzzell, David and Sofaer, Joanna (2022) Perceived place qualities, restorative effects and self-reported wellbeing benefits of visits to heritage sites: empirical evidence from a visitor survey in England. Wellbeing, Space and Society, 3, [100106]. (doi:10.1016/j.wss.2022.100106).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Heritage sites are complex environments that cannot be easily be located within a nature – built space dichotomy. Although a small but growing body of evidence supports the potential of visits to heritage sites in generating wellbeing benefits, there is a gap in understanding how such benefits may be related to the perceived qualities or affordances of heritage sites. We present an exploratory survey instrument designed and tested to generate empirical evidence on the association between the qualities of heritage sites, the restorative effects of a heritage visit, and the extent to which these are positively associated with self-reported subjective wellbeing benefits. The survey was given to sample of 780 visitors to 7 heritage sites in England from June to October 2020. Factor analysis of responses led to extraction of 3 core components related to how participants evaluated their experience of the qualities of place, and 2 core components linked to the restorative effects of the visit. Using these core components to create composite variables, regression models were fitted to understand which qualities of place and effects of the visit predict self-reported wellbeing benefits. The results suggest that different components of heritage sites may contribute to increase in positive affect and reduction in anxiety elements of wellbeing. They suggest potential therapeutic benefits of visits to heritage sites for self-directed visits, and thus potential means of sustainably delivering support for public wellbeing at scale.

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Accepted/In Press date: 6 September 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 September 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: We would like to thank the anonymous referees for their thoughtful comments. We also thank Historic England and The Heritage Alliance for supporting the Places of Joy: Heritage After Lockdown project, as well as staff and visitors at the sites where we conducted fieldwork. Publisher Copyright: © 2022
Keywords: Attention Restoration Theory, Heritage sites, Restorative effects, Subjective wellbeing

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 470268
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470268
ISSN: 2666-5581
PURE UUID: 204ed4fc-3cda-4697-a6a9-f73e88146716
ORCID for Joanna Sofaer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6328-8636

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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2022 16:39
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:52

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Contributors

Author: Eirini Gallou
Author: David Uzzell
Author: Joanna Sofaer ORCID iD

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