Observation Sprints
Connecting lived experience with healthier, more walkable and more inclusive communities across Greater Western Sydney.
Connecting lived experience with healthier, more walkable and more inclusive communities across Greater Western Sydney.
Understanding communities through lived experience, place-based observation and everyday neighbourhood insight.
Observation Sprints are community-led place observations exploring how people experience streets, neighbourhoods, transport, public space and everyday life across Greater Western Sydney.
The initiative helps connect lived experience with planning, health, accessibility, belonging and long-term community outcomes.
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Observation Sprints are short, structured and collaborative place-based observation activities designed to better understand how communities experience their environments.
They explore questions such as:
Is this place easy to walk through?
Does this neighbourhood feel welcoming?
Are public spaces comfortable and inclusive?
Can young people gather safely here?
Is healthy food easy to access?
Does transport connect people to opportunity?
How does heat affect everyday life?
What helps people feel connected to their community?
Observation Sprints combine:
lived experience
local knowledge
systems thinking
visual observation
storytelling
community insight
to help strengthen understanding of how planning and infrastructure affect everyday life.
Communities experience cities differently.
Two places may appear similar on paper but feel completely different in everyday life.
Observation helps reveal:
hidden barriers
overlooked strengths
neighbourhood inequities
accessibility challenges
public life patterns
social connection opportunities
environmental pressures
community needs
Observation Sprints help connect:
what people experience
with:
the systems shaping those experiences.
Observation Sprints contribute to multiple Fair Share priorities because neighbourhood experiences are deeply interconnected.
Explore the Fair Share Framework
Observation Sprints are helping highlight important themes emerging across communities, including:
long travel times
uneven walkability
lack of shade and tree canopy
limited youth gathering spaces
barriers to healthy food access
infrastructure gaps
accessibility challenges
strong community identity and resilience
the importance of welcoming public spaces
how neighbourhood design affects belonging and participation
Young people experience communities differently.
Observation Sprints help create opportunities for young people to contribute insight around:
transport
independence
safety
social connection
public space
housing pressures
future opportunity
neighbourhood belonging
Through the Western Sydney Youth Collective, young people can contribute directly to place-based observations, storytelling and systems insight across Greater Western Sydney.
Observation Sprints connect closely with Equity Diaries and broader storytelling initiatives across GWSAN.
Stories, photos, reflections and lived experience help strengthen understanding of:
neighbourhood life
systems challenges
community strengths
local identity
everyday experiences across Western Sydney
Observation is not only about identifying problems.
It is also about recognising:
resilience
community care
connection
creativity
local strengths
Planning decisions shape everyday life.
The design of neighbourhoods affects:
health
participation
mobility
safety
belonging
opportunity
community wellbeing
Observation Sprints help connect lived experience with broader conversations about:
planning
infrastructure
healthy communities
transport
equity
climate resilience
civic participation
This work helps ensure communities are not only planned for —
but understood.
Get Involved
The Civic Literacy Series is strengthened through community participation, lived experience, collaboration and shared learning.
Whether you want to attend sessions, contribute expertise, share local knowledge or support civic participation initiatives, there are many ways to get involved.
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Together, we can help build stronger civic participation and healthier communities across Greater Western Sydney.
GWSAN is a civic advocacy and research network working to support fairer housing, transport, healthy communities, civic participation and regional equity across Greater Western Sydney through research, public engagement and systems-level advocacy.