People
Tim Townshend
- Deputy Head of School and Project Lead Architecture, Planning and Landscape
- Email: tim.townshend@ncl.ac.uk
- Module 3 Leader - Action plans and guidelines
Tim Townshend is Professor of Urban Design for Health and leader of the Global Urban Research Unit (GURU) 'Urban Design and Human Flourishing" theme in the School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape; http://www.ncl.ac.uk/guru/research/urban-design/#about
Tim has established a national/international profile in interdisciplinary health/built environment work through a steady output of publications that has crossed disciplinary divides. His work has been cited over 2500 times (as at Sept '17). Of particular note was the 2010 co-edited volume ‘Obesogenic Environments’ attracted contributions from Australia, USA, New Zealand and the Netherlands, establishing an international context for Tim's work. His contribution to this volume made the case for interdisciplinary approaches to tackle contemporary health issues such as obesity. This is now widely accepted in the fields of public health and urban planning as evidenced by the growing number of interdisciplinary events in recent years. In 2013 the joint congress of the American Collegiate Schools of Planning (ACSP) and Association of European Schools of Planning established a health track for the first time, for which Tim was the first track chair. In 2014 the major epidemiological conference the International Conference on Urban Health (ICUH) had its initial urban planning track, at which Tim was a keynote speaker.
In the recent past Tim's research has moved beyond obesity to embrace other health and wellbeing issues, for example the development of the "Toxic High Street" concept - http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13574809.2015.1106916
Tim is a regular reviewer for journals from both urban planning and health and funding bodies.
Tim's work always attempts to maximise its impact and as such is always policy relevant. He has been a consultant on a series of national reports and policy documents and sits on a number of external committees and panels.
In 2014 his co-authored paper 'Obesogenic environments:exploring the built and food environments' - was the most downloaded article in Perspectives in Public Health - he received an award from the Royal Society of Public Health in January 2016 in recognition.
Professional Memberships:
Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts