Geographies of infections: built environment and COVID-19 pandemic in metropolitan Melbourne

This paper uses spatial statistical techniques to reflect on geographies of COVID-19 infections in metropolitan Melbourne. The authors argue that the evolution of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has become widespread since early 2020 in Melbourne, typically proceeds through multiple built environment attributes – diversity, destination accessibility, distance to transit, design, and density. The spread of the contagion is institutionalised within local communities and postcodes, and reshapes movement practices, discourses, and structures of administrative politics. The authors demonstrate how a focus on spatial patterns of the built environment can inform scholarship on the spread of infections associated with COVID-19 pandemic and geographies of infections more broadly, by highlighting the consistency of built environment influences on COVID-19 infections across three waves of outbreaks. A focus on the built environment influence seeks to enact visions of the future as new variants emerge, illustrating the importance of understanding geographies of infections as global cities adapt to ‘COVID-normal’ living. The authors argue that understanding geographies of infections within cities could be a springboard for pursuing sustainable urban development via inclusive compact, mixed-use development and safe public transport.

Language

  • English

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  • Accession Number: 01844346
  • Record Type: Publication
  • Files: TRIS
  • Created Date: Apr 28 2022 9:40AM