Ann Forsyth

Ruth and Frank Stanton Professor of Urban Planning

Director of the Master in Urban Planning Program

Chair of the Department of Urban Planning and Design

Ann Forsyth is the Ruth and Frank Stanton Professor of Urban Planning.

Trained in planning and architecture, Forsyth works mainly on the social aspects of physical planning and urban development. The big issue behind her research and practice is how to make more sustainable and healthy cities. Forsyth’s current research focuses on developing healthier places in a suburbanizing world, with overlapping emphases on aging and planned communities.

She has contributed to three main areas of research and practice. First is documenting and assessing innovative and high-density planning and design in suburban/metropolitan areas. This includes research examining new towns as a whole and specific challenging issues: achieving walkability, planning higher density and affordable housing, supporting social diversity, and balancing social and ecological values. Second is work evaluating and proposing how the physical environment can improve health. She has explored physical activity and food environments, processes of densification, and the needs of different age groups, as well as translating research on health and environments into tools for practice. Forsyth has been active in developing and evaluating new instruments and measures using GIS, fieldwork, surveys, impact assessments, public participation processes, and evidence-based practice guidelines. Finally, she has been active examining how to connect research and practice. This includes understanding the different forms of research and investigation, and how research can inform the process and substance of planning.

Her education includes a B.Sc. in architecture from the University of Sydney, M.A. in urban planning from UCLA, and Ph.D. in city and regional planning from Cornell.

At Harvard, Forsyth is affiliated with the Joint Center for Housing StudiesHarvard Center for Population and Development StudiesHarvard University Center for the EnvironmentWeatherhead Center for International Affairs, the Harvard-China Project and the Harvard Global Health Institute.

She is a co-leader of the Healthy Places Design Lab and the New Towns Initiative.

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