Keywords
Accessibility features, Child-friendly parks, Innovative walkways, Landscape architecture, Urban sustainability
Document Type
Article
Abstract
The Urban Park walkways design significantly influences children's access, engagement, and safety in public parks, where design practices usually prioritize physical form over user experience. This study addresses the absence of a contextually informed framework for evaluating child-friendly walkway innovations in three urban parks: Sami Abdulrahman Park (Erbil), Azadi Park (Sulaymaniyah), and Azadi Park (Duhok). Using field observations, feature mapping, and interviews, the research evaluates walkways based on accessibility, engagement, and spatial design efficiency. Findings indicate that Erbil presents a multifunctional design, though it lacks tactile cues; Sulaymaniyah offers a natural aesthetic but limited engagement opportunities, and Duhok features smaller-scale innovations with interactive lighting and clear orientation cues. Feedback emphasized the importance of children's emotional attachment to spaces and ease of navigation. The findings advocate for child-friendly walkways to foster exploration, play, and sensory interactivity, recommending an expanded evaluation framework that reconciles international design principles with local cultural and climatic specifics for future urban park developments.
Recommended Citation
Hussein, Ashna Abdulqader and Mohammed, Ameer Sulaiman
(2026)
"Innovations in Child-Friendly Walkway Design: A Comparative Study of Urban Parks in Erbil, Sulaymaniyah, and Duhok,"
Iraqi Journal of Architecture and Planning: Vol. 25:
Iss.
2, Article 12.
First Page
203
Last Page
222
