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Building Communities That Prioritize Health and Well-Being

Today, more than 4.4 billion people, over half the world’s population, live in urban areas, a figure expected to climb to 70% by 2050, according to the World Bank. Cities will be home to a majority of humanity, and where we live plays a significant role in shaping our overall health and well-being. While genetics and individual choices matter, it is the environments in which we live, work, and play that exert the greatest influence on our health. This presents a unique challenge as well as an extraordinary opportunity for urban planners, policymakers, and developers.
Cities are designed, which means they can also be redesigned to better meet the needs of their inhabitants. The question is: how can we create urban spaces that foster physical, mental, and social well-being for all? The answer lies in thoughtful, community-driven design and innovative practices that integrate wellness and sustainability into the urban fabric.
Designing for wellness
Building healthier communities begins with prioritising spaces that enhance the quality of life. This involves rethinking urban design to promote connection, activity, and tranquillity. For example, walkable neighbourhoods with accessible green spaces encourage physical activity and help reduce stress in residents. Creating meandering paths through the greenery provides havens for pause and relaxation amidst the urban bustle. Quiet zones, sensory gardens, and rooftop wellness areas create spaces for introspection and mental rejuvenation.
There is an epidemic of loneliness sweeping across the world, particularly affecting young people and other vulnerable groups. While social distancing was a necessity to protect public health during the pandemic, we should now take urgent steps to bring people together in shared activities and offer more opportunities for residents to gather and connect.
In cities across the world, from Gothenburg and Berlin to Salem and London, “chatty benches” are being set up to encourage small talk. If you sit on one of the benches, it means you’re open to having a conversation with a stranger. Parks, shared community spaces, and playgrounds foster human connection, addressing urban loneliness and helping to improve mental health.
Integrating retail, hospitality, commercial and residential components within a community not only makes life more convenient and richer for residents but also promotes economic vibrancy and job creation in the area. Restaurants and venues attract both locals and people from outside the community, serving to catalyse investment in surrounding businesses and even help to boost property values.
What’s more, strong social connections help promote overall well-being. Neighbourhoods and local businesses flourish on the back of these networks. Mixed-use communities that weave residential, commercial, and recreational spaces into one seamless urban fabric help make life more vibrant and rewarding.

Smart solutions
In today’s real estate market, wellness is no longer a luxury, it’s a fundamental expectation.
His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates and Ruler of Dubai has approved the Dubai Walk Master Plan, a visionary initiative aimed at transforming Dubai into a pedestrian-friendly city. Dubai Walk promotes active lifestyles, exercise opportunities for all, and makes walking central to daily lives. This vision will position Dubai as one of the world’s healthiest and most sustainable cities.
Developers like Deyaar are already aligning with this vision, integrating wellness and sustainability into projects such as Park Five, a new community under development inDubai Production City, designed to set new standards in urban living, increasing pedestrian and soft mobility within the community.
Internet of Things (IoT)-enabled homes and energy-efficient systems enhance convenience while reducing environmental impact. Sustainable construction, renewable energy initiatives, and waste recycling programs help support a greener future. Community apps and online platforms foster interaction through fitness challenges, local events, and shared resources.
Park Five exemplifies this vision by seamlessly combining wellness-centric living with affordability. Features like yoga lawns, infinity-edge pools, and rooftop Zen gardens encourage an active and balanced lifestyle, while energy-efficient systems and lush greenery promote environmental harmony. Thoughtfully designed pathways, reminiscent of traditional Arabian sikkas, connect residents to wellness and recreational spaces, from co-working areas to shaded outdoor cinemas.
Challenges and Opportunities
Creating wellness-focused urban spaces comes with its own set of challenges. Balancing affordability with high-quality infrastructure is a critical concern, especially in rapidly growing cities. Additionally, urban design must evolve to accommodate shifting demographics and lifestyles, such as remote work and increased demand for wellness amenities. Collaboration between governments, NGOs, and private developers will be essential in addressing these complexities and ensuring that wellness remains accessible to all.
As the world becomes increasingly urbanized, we must rethink how cities are designed. Developers, policymakers, and residents alike have a role to play in creating environments where people thrive. By prioritising wellness and sustainability, we can redefine urban living and build cities that are not just habitable, but truly life-enhancing.
Projects like Park Five by Deyaar are leading the way, demonstrating that it is possible to balance innovation, well-being, and accessibility. While creating a vision for a better future, it also provides a blueprint for making it a reality. Together, we can design communities and build cities that prioritise health, happiness, and sustainability, ensuring that urban living becomes synonymous with a higher quality of life for all.
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THE LOST ART OF REST IN MODERN LIVING

By Haya Bitar – leadership and personal transformation expert, founder of Blue Turtle, and wellness advocate.
What stands out to me about the burnout epidemic is that I don’t believe we are necessarily burning out because we are busier than previous generations. I think we are burning out because we have become disconnected from our bodies and because rest has slowly lost its value in modern life.
Somewhere along the way, rest became associated with laziness or lack of ambition. Productivity became the measure of worth. Achieving, performing and constantly moving became the norm while slowing down started to feel uncomfortable for many people. Yet the body was never designed to operate in a constant state of output.
Rest is no longer something that simply happens naturally in the rhythm of the day. In the past, there were pauses built into life. Prayer times, slower afternoons, moments of gathering, quiet evenings and even siestas created space for the nervous system to reset. Today, life has become more flexible in many ways, but flexibility without intention often means we never truly stop.
This is why I believe we need to schedule rest into our lives in the same way we schedule meetings, deadlines and responsibilities. If we don’t intentionally create space for recovery, it simply gets swallowed by the next task.
What matters equally is the quality of that rest. Many people take time off physically while mentally remaining in performance mode. Even during moments of pause, the mind is still trying to optimise, improve and prepare for the next achievement. True rest cannot exist when the brain still feels like it is being evaluated.
I often speak about something I call the art of fulfillment. These small moments of pause become opportunities to acknowledge ourselves, celebrate progress, appreciate the small wins and reconnect with gratitude rather than pressure. Sometimes ten quiet minutes of presence can shift the entire quality of a day.
Mental fatigue is also very real. The brain uses around 20 percent of the body’s energy, which means constant stimulation, decision-making and information overload come at a cost. When the brain never gets moments of recovery, people begin to experience emotional exhaustion, reduced focus, irritability and a growing sense of disconnection from themselves.
This is also where our homes become incredibly important. A home should not only look beautiful, it should feel regulating. The spaces we live in either signal safety to the nervous system or contribute to overstimulation. Lighting, noise, clutter, constant notifications and even the absence of quiet corners all affect how the body feels within a space.
Creating a calmer home does not need to mean creating perfection. Sometimes it is as simple as creating intentional pauses within the environment. A chair near natural light where no screens are allowed. Softer lighting in the evening. Moments of silence. Areas that invite stillness rather than stimulation.
The nervous system responds to what we repeatedly experience. When a home allows space to breathe, slow down and reconnect to the body, it becomes more than a place we live in. It becomes a place that restores us.
Home Feature
5 DESIGN CHANGES TO STAY COOL THIS SUMMER
Summer in the UAE is not just a seasonal shift, it is a test of how homes are designed to perform. With rising temperatures and longer periods of intense sunlight, residential spaces are increasingly expected to do more than look good; they must actively support comfort.
Rather than relying solely on mechanical cooling, small but intentional design decisions can significantly reduce heat gain and improve how a home feels throughout the day. Here are five approaches that can make a measurable difference by NKEY Architects.
Let Minimalism Do the Cooling
Summer is an opportunity to reassess what a home is carrying; visually and physically. Heavy furniture, cluttered surfaces, excessive textiles, and bold colour palettes can make interiors feel more intense.
A useful starting point is to edit the home with intention. Reviewing furniture, kitchen items, and appliances—and removing what is no longer needed—creates immediate spatial relief. This sense of openness allows light to travel further and air to circulate more freely, improving both comfort and perception of space.
Colour plays a functional role. Lighter tones and softened natural materials help create a cooler visual environment, while darker shades tend to absorb and intensify the effect of direct sunlight. Even a simple wall adjustment can shift the atmosphere of a room.
Beyond interiors, comfort also begins at the building edge. Controlling how much sunlight enters the home is one of the most effective passive cooling strategies. Shading systems that filter harsh light and introduce a buffer zone between exterior and interior surfaces help reduce heat transfer into the building envelope, improving overall thermal performance without relying on mechanical systems.

Turn the Backyard Into a Night-Time Retreat
While daytime outdoor living in peak UAE summer can be challenging, evenings offer a completely different opportunity to reclaim outdoor spaces. A balcony, terrace, porch, or backyard can be reimagined as a night-time retreat designed around comfort.
Comfortable seating, soft layered lighting, gentle cooling fans, and weather-resistant furniture can transform an underused outdoor area into a calm and inviting extension of the home after sunset.
Material selection plays an important role in durability and comfort. Naturally resilient materials such as teak wood perform well in high temperatures and humidity, while also aging gracefully outdoors. This can be complemented with softer layers by including cushions, lanterns and warm string lighting to create a relaxed, lived-in atmosphere.
Greenery further enhances the spatial quality of outdoor areas. Layered planting across different heights introduces depth and softness, helping to reduce the harshness of built surfaces. Potted palms, hanging planters, and climbing plants can quickly shift even compact balconies into more shaded, and refreshing environments.

Bring the Outdoors Inside
For those who prefer to stay indoors during summer, biophilic design offers a simple yet effective way to reconnect interior spaces with nature. Beyond aesthetics, greenery plays a functional role in improving indoor environmental quality. Plants including areca palm, snake plant, peace lily, and aloe vera, are particularly well-suited to UAE homes, due to their resilience in controlled indoor conditions. When thoughtfully positioned, planting can introduce a subtle sense of freshness while softening architectural surfaces and interiors.
Water elements can further enhance this effect. Small indoor fountains or cascading features help create a more stable and calming microclimate. The movement and sound of water add a sensory layer that offsets the intensity of outdoor heat, making interior spaces feel more grounded.
Choose Materials That Work With the Climate
Natural materials such as stone, clay, and adobe contribute to a more stable indoor environment due to their high thermal mass, allowing them to absorb heat during the day and release it gradually as temperatures drop.
Additionally well-insulated walls, roofs, and flooring systems help regulate internal temperatures more effectively, reducing heat gain and limiting reliance on mechanical cooling.
Complementary natural materials such as bamboo, cork, and plant-based fibres can further support a healthier indoor environment. When used appropriately, they contribute to a more balanced material palette suited to the regional climate.

Make Small Changes With Big Impact
Windows are among the primary points of heat gain in residential design. Managing direct sunlight through layered solutions such as blackout curtains, thermal blinds, UV-filtering sheers, and heat-reducing films can significantly reduce solar penetration while still allowing natural daylight to filter through.
In homes with larger glazing areas or open-plan layouts, motorised shading systems offer a more responsive solution, automatically adjusting based on time of day or indoor temperature to maintain visual comfort and thermal balance.
Interior layout also plays an important role in airflow efficiency. Keeping furniture clear of windows and avoiding obstruction of cross-ventilation paths helps air circulate more effectively—particularly in villas and low-rise homes where natural ventilation can still be leveraged.
Ultimately, summer-ready design is about responsiveness rather than transformation. Through considered editing, strategic shading, the integration of greenery, and the use of climate-appropriate materials, homes in the UAE can become more adaptive environments and more comfortable throughout the season.
Home Feature
THE ROLE OF DESIGN THINKING IN MODERN HOME INTEGRATION

By Dr Belma Alik Elsaej, Assistant Professor at Heriot-Watt University Dubai
The concept of home has evolved significantly in recent years. Homes are no longer viewed only as places for shelter and everyday living, but increasingly as environments that support well-being, flexibility, productivity, and human connection. At the same time, technological advancements have transformed how people interact with their domestic spaces through smart systems, automation, and integrated digital solutions. Within this context, design thinking has become an essential approach in shaping modern home integration.
Design thinking is fundamentally a human-centred process. Rather than focusing only on technology or aesthetics independently, it considers how people experience and interact with spaces in their daily lives. In modern home integration, this approach is particularly important because successful design solutions must balance functionality, comfort, sustainability, and emotional well-being.
Today’s integrated homes involve much more than installing smart devices. Lighting systems, climate control, security, entertainment, and energy management are increasingly interconnected. However, technology alone does not create a meaningful living environment. The real challenge lies in understanding user needs and designing systems that feel intuitive, supportive, and adaptable to different lifestyles. This is where design thinking plays a critical role. Through observation, empathy, testing, and problem-solving, designers can create residential environments that respond to occupants’ habits and expectations. For example, integrated lighting systems can be designed not only for energy efficiency but also to support circadian rhythms and psychological comfort. Similarly, automated environmental controls can improve indoor air quality and thermal comfort while reducing energy consumption.
The growing emphasis on well-being within interior architecture and design further highlights the relevance of design thinking in home integration. Following global lifestyle shifts, especially after the pandemic in 2021, people have become more aware of how indoor environments affect physical and mental health. Homes are now expected to support work, rest, social interaction, and personal wellness simultaneously.
As a result, modern home integration increasingly overlaps with principles of biophilic and human-centred design. Natural lighting, visual connection to nature, acoustic comfort, and adaptable living spaces are being integrated alongside digital technologies to create healthier environments. In this sense, technology should not dominate the user experience but rather work quietly in the background to improve everyday life.
Another important aspect of design thinking is adaptability. Modern households are diverse and continuously changing. Spaces often need to accommodate hybrid working, multigenerational living, changing family structures, and evolving lifestyle preferences. Design thinking encourages flexibility and iterative problem-solving, allowing designers to create homes that can evolve over time rather than becoming quickly outdated.
Sustainability also plays a major role in contemporary home integration. Designers are increasingly challenged to create environmentally responsible solutions while maintaining user comfort and convenience. Smart systems can contribute significantly to reducing energy and water consumption, but their effectiveness depends on thoughtful integration within the broader spatial and human context. For instance, automated shading systems combined with passive design strategies can improve thermal performance while minimising energy use. Similarly, intelligent lighting systems can optimise daylight utilisation and reduce unnecessary consumption. When these solutions are guided by design thinking, they become more user-friendly and sustainable in the long term.
Importantly, design thinking encourages collaboration across disciplines. Modern home integration projects often require architects, interior designers, engineers, technology specialists, and sustainability consultants to work together from the early stages of design development. This interdisciplinary approach ensures that technological systems are not treated as isolated additions but as integrated components of the overall spatial experience.
In higher education and design practice, this shift is also influencing how future designers are trained. Students are increasingly encouraged to think critically about the relationship between technology, human behaviour, and spatial quality. The goal is not simply to design visually attractive interiors, but to create meaningful experiences that improve quality of life.
Looking ahead, the future of home integration will likely become even more personalised and responsive. Artificial intelligence, predictive technologies, and data-driven systems will continue to influence residential design. However, despite these technological advancements, the importance of human-centred thinking will remain central.
Ultimately, successful home integration is not defined by the amount of technology within a space, but by how effectively the environment supports the people who live in it. Design thinking provides the framework for achieving this balance by placing human needs, well-being, and experience at the centre of the design process. In doing so, it helps create homes that are not only technologically advanced but also emotionally supportive, sustainable, and adaptable for contemporary living.
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