Land Webinar | Healthy and Inclusive Urban Public Spaces
25 February 2026, 16:30 (CET)
25 February 2026
Urban health, spatial equity, inclusive public spaces, healthier cities, food environment
Welcome from the Chair
6th Land Webinar
Healthy and Inclusive Urban Public Spaces
As urban populations continue to grow, ensuring that cities and public spaces are healthy, inclusive, and accessible has become one of the most pressing challenges of our time. Urban environments shape our daily behaviors, social interactions, access to resources, and overall well-being, yet rapid urbanization, fragmented planning, and persistent social and spatial inequalities continue to limit the potential of cities to support health for all. Addressing these challenges requires integrated, cross-sectoral approaches that recognize health as a central outcome of urban policy and planning.
Achieving healthier and more inclusive cities depends on understanding how multiple urban systems interact. Historic urban manufacturing territories, for example, remain deeply embedded in the spatial and social fabric of cities and present important opportunities for regeneration that can contribute to environmental quality, social cohesion, and public health. At the same time, the urban food environment has emerged as a key determinant of health, closely linked to land-use patterns, accessibility, and governance. These dimensions underscore the importance of a “Health in All Policies” approach, in which health considerations are embedded across urban planning, mobility, housing, environmental, and economic policies.
The webinar “Healthy and Inclusive Urban Public Spaces” aims to foster dialog and knowledge exchange around these issues, while promoting the Special Issue of the journal Land under the same title. This Special Issue brings together interdisciplinary research and case studies focused on accessibility, spatial equity, and well-being, contributing to the sustainable development of human environments.
The webinar features three complementary presentations. The first presentation, “Delivering Healthier Cities in the XXI Century,” will be delivered by Dr. Ester Higueras García, Full Professor and Director of the Department of Urban and Territorial Planning at the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. A leading expert in bioclimatic urbanism and urban health, Dr. Higueras has nearly three decades of experience linking research and practice. As Principal Investigator of the ABIO research group, her work addresses key contemporary challenges such as urban heat resilience, healthy aging, and the integration of green and blue infrastructures into urban policy, emphasizing the urgent need to place health at the core of urban planning.
The second presentation, “Historic Urban Manufacturing Territories and Their Contribution to the Health of Cities,” will be given by Julio Salcedo-Fernandez, Director of the Urban Design Program and former Chair of The Spitzer School of Architecture at the City College of New York. With extensive academic and professional experience in both Europe and the United States, Prof. Salcedo brings a design-driven and institutional perspective to urban regeneration. His work explores how former manufacturing areas can be reimagined as healthy, productive, and inclusive urban environments, informed by his practice at Scalar Architecture and his background with internationally recognized firms.
The webinar will conclude with “Urban Food Environment as a Key Determinant for Urban Health,” presented by Dr. Ana Zazo-Moratalla, Associate Professor of Urban and Territorial Planning at Universidad Rey Juan Carlos. Her research focuses on peri-urban agricultural systems, urban food governance, and innovative territorial models, with particular attention to local-scale planning and the Latin American context. Drawing on both academic research and professional practice, her contribution highlights the central role of food systems in promoting equity, resilience, and public health in urban areas.
Together, these presentations offer a multidisciplinary perspective on how urban planning, policy, and design can contribute to healthier and more inclusive cities, reinforcing the need for integrated approaches that place health and well-being at the heart of urban development.
Date: 25 February 2026
Time: 4:30 PM CET | 10:30 AM EST
Webinar ID: 862 2864 1063
Webinar Secretariat: journal.webinar@mdpi.com
Event Chairs
Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Av. Juan de Herrera, Madrid, Spain
María Teresa has a PhD in Sustainability and Urban Regeneration from the Technical University of Madrid (UPM). She is currently a postdoctoral researcher at the UPM within the regional CMAD-SALUD project. She stands out for her solid international career in projects related to sustainability, urban health, environmental quality, accessibility, and urban mobility. With more than eight years of experience and around 35 scientific publications, her work has helped to transform the way we conceive cities, particularly in relation to older adults and other vulnerable groups. She has conducted research at leading institutions such as the Technical University of Munich (TUM), the Polytechnic University of Catalonia (UPC), and UPM, addressing topics including thermal comfort, spatial justice, proximity-based models, 15-minute cities, and accessibility planning.
Invited Speakers
Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Av. Juan de Herrera, Madrid, Spain
Ester Higueras García is a leading expert in bioclimatic urbanism and urban health, currently serving as a Full Professor (Catedrática) and Director of the Department of Urban and Territorial Planning at the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM). With nearly three decades of experience, she bridges theoretical research and practical urban design, focusing on how environmental planning and public spaces can actively promote citizen well-being. As the Principal Investigator of the ABIO research group (Bioclimatic Architecture in a Sustainable Environment), her work addresses critical challenges in 2026, including urban heat resilience, healthy aging in dense cities, and the integration of green and blue infrastructures into local policy. As the author of the foundational text "Urbanismo Bioclimático," she remains at the forefront of the field, recently delivering keynote insights on the "Resurgam" of territorial planning and the urgency of healthier urban development across Ibero-America.
SSA Spitzer School of Architecture, The City Collegue of New York, USA
Julio Salcedo Fernandez is the Director of Urban Design and former Chair at CCNY and the Principal of Scalar Architecture. His work is centered on urban design as a critical interface between spatial form, environmental systems, governance, and social equity, operating across scales and linking research, practice, and public action. He has taught at Rice University, Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania, Syracuse University, and Cornell University, where his academic work frames design as a civic, institutional, and community-based instrument. His urban design research and practice are grounded in close collaboration with public agencies and community partners, including work with the Resiliency Office in Austin, Texas; community organizations in Allapattah, Miami; and projects sponsored by NYC DDC and the New York City Department of Sanitation. In 2020, he participated in Neighborhoods Now, a citywide initiative sponsored by the Urban Design Forum and the Van Alen Institute, focused on community-led responses to overlapping social, environmental, and public health crises. His work has been widely published internationally, and he is a recipient of the Architectural League Award.
Escuela de Ingeniería de Fuenlabrada, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Madrid, Spain
Ana Zazo-Moratalla is an architect with a PhD in Peripheries, Vitality and Urban Sustainability from the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid[EE1.1] (2015). Currently, she is Associate Professor of Urban Planning and Territorial Planning at the School of Engineering and Architecture of Universidad Rey Juan Carlos. Her main line of research focuses on the analysis and definition of innovative territorial models for peri-urban agricultural systems, as well as on the study of their governance mechanisms, planning processes and management frameworks. Her doctoral thesis examined the Agrarian Park model within the Spanish territorial context. In recent years, her research and knowledge transfer activities have increasingly concentrated on the analysis and planning of urban food systems, particularly at the local scale and within the Latin American context. In the academic field, she has participated in several competitive research projects and served as an academic in Chile for seven years. In the professional field, she has worked in architecture and planning, collaborating with a wide range of companies, associations and NGOs in Spain, the United Kingdom, Mexico and Chile.
Registration
This is a FREE webinar. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information on how to join the webinar. Registrations with academic institutional email addresses will be prioritized.
Certificates of attendance will be delivered to those who attend the live webinar.
Can’t attend? Register anyway and we’ll let you know when the recording is available to watch.
Program
| Speaker/Presentation | Time in CET |
|
María Teresa Baquero Larriva Webinar Kickoff and Special Issue Overview |
4:30 - 4:40 pm |
|
Ester Higueras-García “Delivering Healthier Cities in XXI Century” |
4:40 – 5:00 pm |
|
Julio Salcedo-Fernandez “Historic Urban Manufacturing Territories and Their Contribution to the Health of Cities.” |
5:00 - 5:20 pm |
|
Ana Zazo-Moratalla “Urban Food Environment as Key Determinant for Urban Health |
5:20 - 5:40 pm |
| Q & A | 5:40 - 5:50 pm |
| MDPI Partnership, Journal Metrics and Submission Options | 5:50 - 5:55 pm |
|
Closing of Webinar María Teresa Baquero Larriva |
5:55 - 6:00 pm |
Relevant Special Issue
Healthy and Inclusive Urban Public Spaces
Edited by Dr. Ester Higueras García, Dr. Andrea Alonso and Dr. María Teresa Baquero Larriva
Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 May 2026
