Crime prevention through environmental design (CPTED) is an agenda for manipulating the built environment to create safer neighborhoods.
It originated in America around 1960, when urban renewal strategies were felt to be destroying the social framework needed for self-policing. Architect Oscar Newman created the concept of ‘defensible space’, developed further by criminologist C. Ray Jeffery who coined the term CPTED. Growing interest in environmental criminology led to detailed study of specific topics such as natural surveillance, access control and territoriality. The "broken window" principle that neglected zones invite crime reinforced the need for good property maintenance to assert visible ownership of space. Appropriate environmental design can also increase the perceived likelihood of detection and apprehension, known to be the biggest single deterrent to crime. And there has been new interest in the interior design of prisons as an environment that significantly affects decisions to offend.
Wide-ranging recommendations to architects include the planting of trees and shrubs, the elimination of escape routes, the correct use of lighting, and the encouragement of pedestrian and bicycle traffic in streets. Tests show that the application of CPTED measures overwhelmingly reduces criminal activity.
It originated in America around 1960, when urban renewal strategies were felt to be destroying the social framework needed for self-policing. Architect Oscar Newman created the concept of ‘defensible space’, developed further by criminologist C. Ray Jeffery who coined the term CPTED. Growing interest in environmental criminology led to detailed study of specific topics such as natural surveillance, access control and territoriality. The "broken window" principle that neglected zones invite crime reinforced the need for good property maintenance to assert visible ownership of space. Appropriate environmental design can also increase the perceived likelihood of detection and apprehension, known to be the biggest single deterrent to crime. And there has been new interest in the interior design of prisons as an environment that significantly affects decisions to offend.
Wide-ranging recommendations to architects include the planting of trees and shrubs, the elimination of escape routes, the correct use of lighting, and the encouragement of pedestrian and bicycle traffic in streets. Tests show that the application of CPTED measures overwhelmingly reduces criminal activity.
History
CPTED was originally coined and formulated by criminologist C. Ray Jeffery. A more limited approach, termed defensible space, was developed concurrently by architect Oscar Newman. Both men built on the previous work of Elizabeth Wood, Jane Jacobs
and Schlomo Angel. Jeffery's book, "Crime Prevention Through
Environmental Design" came out in 1971, but his work was ignored
throughout the 1970s. Newman's book, "Defensible Space: – Crime
Prevention through Urban Design"
came out in 1972. His principles were widely adopted but with mixed
success. The defensible space approach was subsequently revised with
additional built environment approaches supported by CPTED. Newman
represented this as CPTED and credited Jeffery as the originator of the
CPTED term. Newman's CPTED-improved defensible space approach enjoyed
broader success and resulted in a reexamination of Jeffery's work.
Jeffery continued to expand the multi-disciplinary aspects of the
approach, advances which he published, with the last one published in
1990. The Jeffery CPTED model is more comprehensive than the Newman
CPTED model, which limits itself to the built environment. Later
models of CPTED were developed based on the Newman Model, with
criminologist Tim Crowe's being the most popular.
As of 2004, CPTED is popularly understood to refer strictly to
the Newman/Crowe type models, with the Jeffery model treated more as
multi-disciplinary approach to crime prevention which incorporates
biology and psychology, a situation accepted even by Jeffery himself.
(Robinson, 1996). A revision of CPTED, initiated in 1997, termed 2nd
Generation CPTED, adapts CPTED to offender individuality, further
indication that Jeffery's work is not popularly considered to be already
a part of CPTED. in 2012 Woodbridge introduced and developed CPTED in
prison and showed how design flaws allowed criminals to keep offending.
1960s
In the 1960s Elizabeth Wood developed guidelines for addressing security issues while working with the Chicago Housing Authority,
placing emphasis on design features that would support natural
surveillability. Her guidelines were never implemented but stimulated
some of the original thinking that led to CPTED.
Jane Jacobs' book, The Death and Life of Great American Cities (1961) argued that urban diversity and vitality were being destroyed by urban planners and their urban renewal strategies. She was challenging the basic tenets of urban planning of the time: that neighborhoods should be isolated from each other; that an empty street is safer than a crowded one; and that the car represents progress over the pedestrian. An editor for Architectural Forum
magazine (1952–1964), she had no formal training in urban planning, but
her work emerged as a founding text for a new way of seeing cities. She
felt that the way cities were being designed and built meant that the
general public would be unable to develop the social framework needed
for effective self-policing. She pointed out that the new forms of urban
design broke down many of the traditional controls on criminal
behavior, for example, the ability of residents to watch the street and
the presence of people using the street both night and day. She
suggested that the lack of "natural guardianship" in the environment
promoted crime. Jacobs developed the concept that crime flourishes when people do not meaningfully interact with their neighbors. In Death and Life, Jacobs listed the three attributes needed to make a city street safe: a clear demarcation of private and public space; diversity of use; and a high level of pedestrian use of the sidewalks.
Schlomo Angel was an early pioneer of CPTED and studied under noted planner Christopher Alexander. Angel's Ph.D. thesis, Discouraging Crime Through City Planning, (1968) was a study of street crime in Oakland, CA. In it he states "The
physical environment can exert a direct influence on crime settings by
delineating territories, reducing or increasing accessibility by the
creation or elimination of boundaries and circulation networks, and by
facilitating surveillance by the citizenry and the police." He asserted that crime was inversely related to the level of activity on the street, and that the commercial
strip environment was particularly vulnerable to crime because it
thinned out activity, making it easier for individuals to commit street
crime. Angel developed and published CPTED concepts in 1970 in work
supported and widely distributed by the United States Department of Justice (Luedtke, 1970).
1970s
The phrase crime prevention through environmental design (CPTED) was first used by C. Ray Jeffery, a criminologist from Florida State University. The phrase began to gain acceptance after the publication of his 1971 book of the same name.
- Jeffery's work was based on the precepts of experimental psychology represented in modern learning theory. (Jeffery and Zahm, 1993:329) Jeffery's CPTED concept arose out of his experiences with a rehabilitative project in Washington, D.C. that attempted to control the school environment of juveniles in the area. Rooted deeply in the psychological learning theory of B.F. Skinner, Jeffery's CPTED approach emphasized the role of the physical environment in the development of pleasurable and painful experiences for the offender that would have the capacity to alter behavioral outcomes. His original CPTED model was a stimulus-response (S-R) model positing that the organism learned from punishments and reinforcements in the environment. Jeffery "emphasized material rewards . . . and the use of the physical environment to control behavior" (Jeffery and Zahm, 1993:330). The major idea here was that by removing the reinforcements for crime, it would not occur. (Robinson, 1996)
An often overlooked contribution of Jeffery in his 1971 book is
outlining four critical factors in crime prevention that have stood the
test of time. These are the degrees to which one can manipulate the
opportunity for a crime to occur, the motivation for the crime to occur,
the risk to the offender if the crime occurs, and the history of the
offender who might consider committing the crime. The first three of
these are within the control of the potential victim while the last is
not.
For reasons that have received little attention, Jeffery's work
was ignored throughout the 1970s. Jeffery's own explanation is that, at a
time when the world wanted prescriptive design solutions, his work
presented a comprehensive theory and used it to identify a wide range of
crime prevention functions that should drive design and management
standards.
Concurrent with Jeffery's largely theoretical work was Oscar Newman and George Rand's empirical study
of the crime-environment connection conducted in the early 1970s. As an
architect, Newman placed emphasis on the specific design features, an
emphasis missing in Jeffery's work. Newman's "Defensible Space – Crime
Prevention through Urban Design (1972) includes extensive discussion of
crime related to the physical form of housing based on crime data
analysis from New York City public housing. "Defensible Space" changed
the nature of the crime prevention and environmental design field and
within two years of its publication substantial federal funding was made
available to demonstrate and study defensible space concepts.
As established by Newman, defensible space must contain two
components. First, defensible space should allow people to see and be
seen continuously. Ultimately, this diminishes residents' fear because
they know that a potential offender can easily be observed, identified,
and consequently, apprehended. Second, people must be willing to
intervene or report crime when it occurs. By increasing the sense of
security in settings where people live and work, it encourages people to
take control of the areas and assume a role of ownership. When people
feel safe in their neighborhood they are more likely to interact with
one another and intervene when crime occurs. These remain central to
most implementations of CPTED as of 2004.
In 1977, Jeffery's second edition of Crime Prevention Through
Environmental Design expanded his theoretical approach to embrace a more
complex model of behavior
in which variable physical environments, offender behavior as
individuals and behavior of individual members of the general public
have reciprocal influences on one another. This laid the foundation for
Jeffery to develop a behavioral model aimed at predicting the effects
of modifying both the external environment and the internal environment
of individual offenders.
1980s
By the 1980s, the defensible space prescriptions of the 1970s were determined to have mixed effectiveness. They worked best in residential
settings, especially in settings where the residents were relatively
free to respond to cues to increase social interaction. Defensible
space design tools were observed to be marginally effective in
institutional and commercial settings. As a result, Newman and others
moved to improve defensible space, adding CPTED based features. They
also deemphasised less effective aspects of defensible space.
Contributions to the advance of CPTED in the 1980s included:
- The "broken windows" theory, put forth by James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling in 1982, explored the impact that visible deterioration and neglect in neighborhoods have on behavior. Property maintenance was added as a CPTED strategy on par with surveillance, access control and territoriality. The Broken Windows theory may go hand in hand with CPTED. Crime is attracted to the areas that are not taken care of or abandoned. CPTED adds a pride of ownership feeling to the community. With no more "broken windows" in certain neighborhoods, crime will continue to decline and eventually fall out completely.
- Canadian academicians Patricia and Paul Brantingham published Environmental Criminology in 1981. According to the authors, a crime takes place when all of the essential elements are present. These elements consist of: a law, an offender, a target, and a place. They characterize these as "the four dimensions of crime", with environmental criminology studying the last of the four dimensions.
- British criminologists Ronald V. Clarke and Patricia Mayhew developed their "situational crime prevention" approach: reducing opportunity to offend by improving design and management of the environment.
- Criminologist Timothy Crowe developed his CPTED training programs.
1990s
Criminology: An Interdisciplinary Approach (1990), was Jeffery's final contribution to CPTED. The Jeffery CPTED model evolved to one which assumes that
- The environment never influences behavior directly, but only through the brain. Any model of crime prevention must include both the brain and the physical environment. ... Because the approach contained in Jeffery's CPTED model is today based on many fields, including scientific knowledge of modern brain sciences, a focus on only external environmental crime prevention is inadequate as it ignores another entire dimension of CPTED – i.e., the internal environment. (Robinson, 1996)
Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (1991) by criminologist Tim Crowe provided a solid base for CPTED to move forward into the rest of the 1990s.
From 1994 through 2002, Sparta Consulting Corporation led by
Severin Sorensen, CPP managed the US Government's largest CPTED
technical assistance and training program titled Crime Prevention
Through Environmental Design (CPTED) in Public Housing Technical
Assistance and Training Program, funded by the US Department of Housing
and Urban Development. During this period Sorensen worked with Ronald V.
Clarke and the Sparta team to develop a new CPTED Curriculum that used
Situational Crime Prevention as an underlying theoretical basis for
CPTED measures. A curriculum was developed and trained to stakeholders
in public and assisted housing, and follow-up CPTED assessments were
conducted at various sites. The Sparta-led CPTED projects showed
statistical reductions in self reported FBI UCR Part I crimes between
17% to 76% depending on the basket of CPTED measures employed in
specific high crime, low income settings in the United States.
In 1996, Oscar Newman published an update to his earlier CPTED works, titled, Creating Defensible Space,
Institute for Community Design Analysis, Office of Planning and
Development Research (PDR), US Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD).
In 1997, an article by Greg Saville and Gerry Cleveland, 2nd
Generation CPTED, exhorted CPTED practitioners to consider the original
social ecology origins of CPTED, including social and psychological
issues beyond the built environment.
2000s
By 2004,
elements of the CPTED approach had gained wide international acceptance
due to law enforcement efforts to embrace it. The CPTED term
"environment" is commonly used to refer to the external environment of
the place. Jeffery's intention that CPTED also embrace the internal
environment of the offender seems to have been lost, even on those
promoting the expansion of CPTED to include social ecology and
psychology under the banner of 2nd Generation CPTED.
In 2012 Woodbridge introduced and developed the concept of CPTED within a
prison environment, a place where crime still continues after
conviction. Jeffery's understanding of the criminal mind from his study
in rehabilitative facilities over forty years ago was now being used to
reduce crime in those same type of facilities. Woodbridge showed how
prison design allowed offending to continue and introduced changes to
reduce crime.
CPTED techniques are increasingly benefiting from integration
with design technologies. For instance, models of proposed buildings
developed in Building Information Modelling may be imported into video game engines to assess their resilience to different forms of crime.
Strategies for the built environment
CPTED
strategies rely upon the ability to influence offender decisions that
precede criminal acts. Research into criminal behavior shows that the
decision to offend or not to offend is more influenced by cues to the
perceived risk of being caught than by cues to reward or ease of entry.
Certainty of being caught is the main deterrence for criminals not the
severity of the punishment so by raising the certainty of being
captured, criminal actions will decrease. Consistent with this research,
CPTED based strategies emphasise enhancing the perceived risk of
detection and apprehension.
Consistent with the widespread implementation of defensible space guidelines in the 1970s, most implementations of CPTED by 2004
were based solely upon the theory that the proper design and effective
use of the built environment can reduce crime, reduce the fear of crime,
and improve the quality of life. Built environment implementations of
CPTED seek to dissuade offenders from committing crimes by manipulating
the built environment in which those crimes proceed from or occur. The
six main concepts according to Moffat are territoriality, surveillance,
access control, image/maintenance, activity support and target
hardening. Applying all of these strategies is key when trying to
prevent crime in any neighborhood crime ridden or not.
Natural surveillance and access control strategies limit the
opportunity for crime. Territorial reinforcement promotes social control
through a variety of measures. Image/maintenance and activity support
provide the community with reassurance and the ability to inhibit crime
by citizen activities. Target hardening strategies round up all of these
techniques to resolve crime into one final step.
Natural surveillance
Natural surveillance
increases the perceived risk of attempting deviant actions by improving
visibility of potential offenders to the general public. Natural
surveillance occurs by designing the placement of physical features,
activities and people in such a way as to maximize visibility of the
space and its users, fostering positive social interaction among
legitimate users of private and public space.
Potential offenders feel increased scrutiny, and thus inherently
perceive an increase in risk. This perceived increase in risk extends to
the perceived lack of viable and covert escape routes.
- Design streets to increase pedestrian and bicycle traffic
- Place windows overlooking sidewalks and parking lots.
- Leave window shades open.
- Use passing vehicular traffic as a surveillance asset.
- Create landscape designs that provide surveillance, especially in proximity to designated points of entry and opportunistic points of entry.
- Use the shortest, least sight-limiting fence appropriate for the situation.
- Use transparent weather vestibules at building entrances.
- When creating lighting design, avoid poorly placed lights that create blind-spots for potential observers and miss critical areas. Ensure potential problem areas are well lit: pathways, stairs, entrances/exits, parking areas, ATMs, phone kiosks, mailboxes, bus stops, children's play areas, recreation areas, pools, laundry rooms, storage areas, dumpster and recycling areas, etc.
- Avoid too-bright security lighting that creates blinding glare and/or deep shadows, hindering the view for potential observers. Eyes adapt to night lighting and have trouble adjusting to severe lighting disparities. Using lower intensity lights often requires more fixtures.
- Use shielded or cut-off luminaires to control glare.
- Place lighting along pathways and other pedestrian-use areas at proper heights for lighting the faces of the people in the space (and to identify the faces of potential attackers).
- Utilizing curved streets with multiple view points to multiple houses' entrances, as well as making the escape route difficult to follow.
Natural surveillance measures can be complemented by mechanical and organizational measures. For example, closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras can be added in areas where window surveillance is unavailable.
Natural access control
Natural access control limits the opportunity for crime by taking
steps to clearly differentiate between public space and private space.
By selectively placing entrances and exits, fencing, lighting and
landscape to limit access or control flow, natural access control
occurs.
- Use a single, clearly identifiable, point of entry
- Use structures to divert persons to reception areas
- Incorporate maze entrances in public restrooms. This avoids the isolation that is produced by an anteroom or double door entry system
- Use low, thorny bushes beneath ground level windows. Use rambling or climbing thorny plants next to fences to discourage intrusion.
- Eliminate design features that provide access to roofs or upper levels
- In the front yard, use waist-level, picket-type fencing along residential property lines to control access, encourage surveillance.
- Use a locking gate between front and backyards.
- Use shoulder-level, open-type fencing along lateral residential property lines between side yards and extending to between back yards. They should be sufficiently unencumbered with landscaping to promote social interaction between neighbors.
- Use substantial, high, closed fencing (for example, masonry) between a backyard and a public alley instead of a wall which blocks the view from all angles.
Natural access control is used to complement mechanical and operational access control measures, such as target hardening.
Natural territorial reinforcement
Territorial reinforcement promotes social control through increased
definition of space and improved proprietary concern.
An environment designed to clearly delineate private space does two
things. First, it creates a sense of ownership. Owners have a vested
interest and are more likely to challenge intruders or report them to
the police. Second, the sense of owned space creates an environment
where "strangers" or "intruders" stand out and are more easily
identified. By using buildings, fences, pavement, signs, lighting and
landscape to express ownership and define public, semi-public and
private space, natural territorial reinforcement occurs. Additionally,
these objectives can be achieved by assignment of space to designated
users in previously unassigned locations.
- Maintained premises and landscaping such that it communicates an alert and active presence occupying the space.
- Provide trees in residential areas. Research results indicate that, contrary to traditional views within the law enforcement community, outdoor residential spaces with more trees are seen as significantly more attractive, more safe, and more likely to be used than similar spaces without trees.
- Restrict private activities to defined private areas.
- Display security system signage at access points.
- Avoid chain link fencing and razor-wire fence topping, as it communicates the absence of a physical presence and a reduced risk of being detected.
- Placing amenities such as seating or refreshments in common areas in a commercial or institutional setting helps to attract larger numbers of desired users.
- Scheduling activities in common areas increases proper use, attracts more people and increases the perception that these areas are controlled.
- Motion sensor lights at all entry points into the residence.
Territorial reinforcement measures make the normal user feel safe and
make the potential offender aware of a substantial risk of apprehension
or scrutiny. When people take pride in what they own and go to the
proper measures to protect their belongings, crime is deterred from
those areas because now it makes it more of a challenge. Criminals don't
want their job to be hard, because if it was hard, then they wouldn't
do it. The more difficult it is to commit a crime in certain areas, the
less crime will occur.
Other CPTED elements
Maintenance
and activity support aspects of CPTED were touched upon in the
preceding, but are often treated separately because they are not
physical design elements within the built environment.
Maintenance
Maintenance
is an expression of ownership of property. Deterioration indicates
less control by the intended users of a site and indicate a greater
tolerance of disorder. The Broken Windows Theory
is a valuable tool in understanding the importance of maintenance in
deterring crime. Broken Windows theory proponents support a zero tolerance
approach to property maintenance, observing that the presence of a
broken window will entice vandals to break more windows in the vicinity.
The sooner broken windows are fixed, the less likely it is that such
vandalism will occur in the future. Vandalism falls into the broken
windows category as well. The faster the graffiti is painted over, the
less likely one is to repeat because no one saw what has been done.
Having a positive image in the community shows a sense of pride and
self-worth that no one can take away from the owner of the property.
Activity support
Activity
support increases the use of a built environment for safe activities
with the intent of increasing the risk of detection of criminal and
undesirable activities. Natural surveillance by the intended users is
casual and there is no specific plan for people to watch out for
criminal activity. By placing signs such as caution children playing and
signs for certain activities in the area, the citizens of that area
will be more involved in what is happening around them. They will be
more tuned in to who is and who isn't supposed to be there and what
looks suspicious on a day-to-day life.
Effectiveness and criticism
CPTED
strategies are most successful when they inconvenience the end user the
least and when the CPTED design process relies upon the combined
efforts of environmental designers,
land managers, community activists, and law enforcement professionals.
The strategies listed above can't be fulfilled without the community's
help and it requires the whole community in the location to make the
environment a safer place to live. A meta-analysis of multiple-component
CPTED initiatives in the United States has found that they have
decreased robberies between 30 and 84% (Casteel and Peek-Asa, 2000).
In terms of effectiveness, a more accurate title for the strategy would be crime deterrence
through environmental design. Research demonstrates that offenders
might not always be prevented from committing some crimes by using
CPTED. CPTED relies upon changes to the physical environment that will
cause an offender to make certain behavioral decisions, and some of
those decisions will include desisting from crime. Those changes are
crafted so as to encourage behavior, and thus they deter rather than
conclusively "prevent" behavior.
Beyond the attraction of being cost effective in lowering the
incidence of crime, CPTED typically reduces the overall costs of
preventing crime. Retrofitting an existing environment to meet CPTED
can sometimes be costly, but when incorporated in the original design
phase of facility planning, cost of designing to CPTED principles are
often lower than with traditional approaches. Operational costs are
often lower also, as CPTED lighting designs can significantly lower
energy use. Adding to the attraction of CPTED is that it lowers
liability. At times the entire street style must be changed and
buildings have to be up to code with more windows and changing their
view and access points to other areas around the building like the
parking lot or store front.