For catering purposes, please register to attend.
When registering for this event, we will collect personal data from you. This information will not be passed outside of the University of Nottingham. Please read our privacy information for more detail about how we use data.
As more children grow up in cities, designing urban environments that meet their needs has become increasingly crucial. However, young children's experiences and visions for liveable, resilient, and inclusive cities are often overlooked in urban planning. This paper presents a participatory research project with 76 children (aged 3–4 years) from Dunedin and Wellington, New Zealand, challenging traditional top-down urban planning approaches and advocating for a more radical, participatory model that prioritises young children’s voices. Through a tile-based mapping exercise and a photo-elicitation activity, children shared how they experience and envision their cities—ranging from imaginative constructions to realistic urban representations. The photographs they took offer a unique lens through which we can view their urban environments, providing rich insights into their everyday experiences, spatial interactions, and the ways in which social and built environments shape their lives. By centring children’s perspectives, this research highlights the importance of inclusive urban design that fosters well-being, play, and connection. It calls for cities that support the flourishing and resilience of both human communities and the more-than-human world, paving the way for more just, equitable, and child-friendly urban futures.
Lunch will be provided for free from 12-1 pm with networking opportunities.
University of NottinghamJubilee CampusWollaton Road Nottingham, NG8 1BB
Contact us