

What is Crime Prevention through Environmental Design?
Crime Prevention through Environmental Design (CPTED, pronounced sep-ted¬) alters the environment of blocks, neighborhoods, or even entire cities to prevent and reduce crime.
CPTED works by:
Examples of How to Use CPTED in Your Neighborhood
The following strategies work by helping neighbors take and keep control of their space:
Define Territory: | Neighbors make physical improvements, alterations or additions to their blocks and neighborhood that encourage ownership. |
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Control Access: | Neighbors limit entrance and exit points using physical features such as fencing and signage to encourage the use of space by neighbors and restrict the use of space by illegitimate users. |
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Maintain Image: | Residents keep their blocks and neighborhood well-maintained to show that the area is cared for and negative activity will not be tolerated. |
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Encourage Natural Surveillance: | Neighbors use natural monitoring such as lighting and clear sight lines (as opposed to cameras and police presence) to put more “eyes on the street” and make illegitimate users feel uncomfortable. |
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Support Positive Activities: | Neighbors organize activities and events to make sure their spaces are being used for their intended purposes. |
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Enhance Relationships: | Neighborhood residents participate in activities that will promote effective relationship-building skills. |
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Encourage Connectivity: | Neighbors actively connect with other community and city partners to build resources.
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Define & Celebrate Neighborhood Culture: | Build neighborhood pride by holding events and activities that highlight neighborhood identity.
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References and Further Reading
Jane Jacobs’ Life and Death of Great American Cities, 1961 (PDF)
Jane Jacob’s uses New York City as a case study of what makes urban neighborhoods work. Her discussion about safety laid the groundwork for CPTED principles. Most notably she makes observations about the importance of natural surveillance, or “eye’s on the street,” in creating safe neighborhoods and discusses the physical and social context in which natural surveillance is most strong.
Oscar Newman’s Defensible Space: Crime Prevention through Urban Design, 1972
In a study of New York City’s public housing projects, Newman builds on Jacobs’ ideas to discuss the importance of using neighborhood design and architecture to facilitate an environment of social control. He discusses territoriality (clearly defined spaces of ownership), natural surveillance, and symbolic barriers (objects placed in the environment that signal that a space is cared for).
SafeGrowth: Creating Safety & Sustainability through Community Building and Urban Design (PDF)
This Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC) paper gives a summary of the most up-to-date information on CPTED implementation, including examples of how it has been used successfully to solve neighborhood crime problems through both physical and social interventions.