Dr Joanne M Leach BSc, MSc, PhD

Joanne M Leach

Department of Civil Engineering
Research Fellow

Contact details

Address
Department of Civil Engineering
School of Engineering
University 麻豆精选
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT
UK

Joanne’s research interests can be found at the intersection of liveability, sustainability and resilience, with an emphasis upon research integration, transdisciplinary working practices and the science of team science. Her research focuses upon the link between the built environment, infrastructure and wellbeing.

Joanne has a keen interest in developing and translating research outcomes to influence how people think about cities. She was interviewed by The Daily Telegraph for a front-page Saturday supplement article on why cities are still great places to live; for the University 麻豆精选’s flagship report Keeping 1.5⁰C Alive, for BBC Radio 4’s Costing the Earth programme ; for , exploring the role of electric cars in transportation, infrastructure, urbanisation and human behaviour; for the Journal of Biophilic Design videocast: ; for the on Wales' 20mph speed limit policy; and has written for about Birmingham’s transport plan.

Joanne Leach talks about 'Making Good Decisions' in relation to the Liveable Cities ESPRC-funded programme.

Qualifications

  • PhD in Civil Engineering, University 麻豆精选, Birmingham, UK, 2020
  • MSc (Distinction) in Design Management, University of Salford, Salford, UK, 2010
  • BSc (Hons) International Business with a minor in mathematics, Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas, USA, 1995

Biography

Joanne Leach is a Research Fellow at the University 麻豆精选, joining in 2008 as the Project Coordinator for Designing Resilient Cities. Dr Leach currently works as Executive Manager for the UK Collaboratorium for Research on Infrastructure and Cities (), with an emphasis upon research integration, transdisciplinary working practices and the science of team science. Dr Leach’s research focuses upon urban liveability, resilience and sustainability – with a specific interest in the link between the built environment, infrastructure and wellbeing – and how these aspects can be usefully determined, measured and communicated to decision-makers.

Joanne was involved in the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council’s (EPSRC’s) Sustainable Urban Environments (SUE) Programme, working with Prof Rachel Cooper on the 24-hour city (VivaCity2020, £3M) and Professor Chris Rogers on urban futures (Designing Resilient Cities, £3M). She was also part of the Liveable Cities Programme Grant (£6M), which put wellbeing at the heart of transforming how UK cities are engineered and for which she designed a substantive measurement and assessment tool to measure liveable-sustainability. Joanne was also part of the EPSRC-funded project, which assessed the efficacy of the EPSRC’s SUE programme. She has also been involved in numerous other urban sustainability-related projects and initiatives, covering issues from crime to soundscapes.

In 2016 and 2017, Joanne split her time between Liveable Cities and the Urban Living Birmingham pilot project (one of five Urban Living Partnership projects), where she focussed upon developing and applying an urban challenges diagnostics methodology that incorporated an evidence mapping approach.

During her time at the University 麻豆精选, Joanne has collaborated with over 20 UK Universities and over 200 professional bodies, industry groups, industry research groups, government bodies and international partners. Selected examples include:

  • Was involved in the University 麻豆精选 Policy Commission on Future Urban Living, chaired by Lord Shipley.
  • Co-authored consultation responses on: Life beyond Covid (commissioned by the UK House of Lords Committee on Covid-19); Improving competitiveness – discussion paper on the Commissions Objectives (commissioned by the National Infrastructure Commission (NIC); the link between infrastructure and the natural environment (commissioned by the NIC); UK infrastructure (commissioned by Lord Armitt); the UK’s Sustainable Development Indicators (commissioned by defra); the UK Lane Rental Scheme (commission by the Department for Transport); the PAS:182:2014 Smart City Concept Model; Ordnance Survey Products and Services Improvement.
  • Contributed to the Institution of Civil Engineer’s RDIEE panel shaping the R&D enabling fund call on engineering the future of cities, Birmingham Food Council’s Food and the City Economy report, Birmingham City Council’s Green Commission’s position paper on energy and resources and their HS2 Landscape and Environment Prospectus, Birmingham City Council’s Smart Commission, the Birmingham Science City Innovation and Low Carbon Working Group, and the London Quality of Life Report
  • Led workshops on planning for resilience with the Birmingham City Council Senior Leaders Group and the Royal Town Planning Institute (RTPI)
  • Part of Knowledge Transfer Secondments with CH2M HILL and BRE, developing materials on urban sustainability and resilience
  • Co-authored a piece on designing liveable cities for the Centre for Alternative Technology’s 2013 Zero Carbon Britain Report
  • Co-authored Designing Resilient Cities, a Guide to Good Practice (IHS BRE Press)
  • Was lead author on ‘’, winner of the 2015 Reed Mallik prize for the best paper published that year in Proceedings of the ICE: Urban Design and Planning

Before joining the University 麻豆精选, Joanne was a research project manager at Lancaster University and the University of Salford, where she obtained her MSc in Design Management. She obtained her PhD in Engineering from the University 麻豆精选 on ‘Measuring City Performance and Diagnosing City Challenges: A Decision-Making Framework for Policymaking and Urban Design’.

Research

Current research projects

  • Healthy Low-carbon Transport Hub
    February 2025 - present

    The Healthy Low-carbon transport hub is leading research into maximising the health benefits of low-carbon transport.

  • Road to Net Zero
    May 2024 – present

    The initiative is addressing the challenges of achieving net zero in the UK's street and road works sector by fostering collaboration across the industry and developing evidence-led strategies that will help achieve the UK's ambitious 2050 net zero targets.
  • UKCRIC
    January 2018 - present

    The (UKCRIC) is a collaboration of UK universities committed to connecting research with policy and practice in infrastructure and urban systems. UKCRIC provides access to an internationally leading and significant network of infrastructure laboratories, urban observatories and advanced computational and visualisation facilities as well as to an unparalleled network of academic experts in infrastructure and urban systems.

Previous research projects

  • Replenish
    University 麻豆精选
    March - December 2020

    Replenish was a UKPRP-funded consortium of multi-disciplinary researchers and practitioners exploring how a radically different approach to engineering infrastructure systems and cityscapes can improve people’s health and wellbeing, with particular focus upon non-communicable diseases (NCDs).

  • PLEXUS
    University 麻豆精选
    January 2018 – December 2019

    Priming Laboratory EXperiments on infrastructure and Urban Systems (PLEXUS) was a UKCRIC laboratories pump-priming project. This proposal aimed to prepare for and use UKCRIC’s laboratory facilities for the ultimate purpose of developing UKCRIC’s research staff capacity & capability, and create a Common Vision, Strategic Research Agenda & Implementation Action Plan for the Laboratories Strand via three expansive yet interlinked critical technical infrastructure challenges. The three challenges were: (1) intense physical interdependency of urban infrastructure systems, with a focus upon integral bridges; (2) harvesting energy from buried infrastructure systems; and, (3) accelerated deterioration of infrastructure materials due to extreme loading.

  • Urban Living Birmingham Pilot Project
    University 麻豆精选
    June 2016 - November 2017

    A £500,000, 18-month, EPSRC-funded pilot project to identify improvements to urban services by combining top-down urban governance with bottom-up lay and expert knowledge to provide an environment that emphasises and encourages innovations that generate a step change in urban service provision.

    See  for more details.
  • Liveable Cities 
    University 麻豆精选
    May 2012 – April 2017 with a no-cost extension to December 2017

    A £6.3 million, 5-year, EPSRC-funded programme grant to identify and test radical engineering solutions that will lead to low carbon, resource secure future cities in which societal well-being is prioritised.   
  • Sustainable Regeneration: from Evidence-based Urban Futures to Implementation
    University 麻豆精选
    May 2008 – April 2012

    A £3.1 million, 4-year, EPSRC-funded research project that developed a 5-step method to test the future performance of urban development and regeneration-related ‘sustainability solutions’ – actions taken today in the name of sustainability – in a series of possible future scenarios. The method is supported by a web-based Interactive Tool.
  • Resilience Through Innovation: Critical Local Transport and Utility Infrastructure
    University 麻豆精选
    November 2010 – April 2012, part time

    A £200,000, EPSRC-funded scoping project into the research needed to bring about radical changes in thinking and practice for an assured future in the face of multiple threats/risks. 
  • SUE Research Dialogues
    University 麻豆精选
    January – June 2010, part time

    A six-month, £80,000, EPSRC-funded research project into developing the Sustainable Urban Environments (SUE) research community as funded via three calls from the EPSRC. 

    See the  website for more information.
  • Positive Soundscapes
    The University of Salford
    December 2006 – September 2009, part time

    A 3-year, £1 million, EPSRC-funded research project into what comprises a positive urban soundscape.  
  • VivaCity2020
    University of Salford and Lancaster University
    October 2003 – April 2008

    A £2.9 million, 5-year, EPSRC-funded research project that through innovative and interdisciplinary research developed a toolkit of resources that can be used to navigate urban sustainability issues. The toolkit addresses sustainability issues by encouraging decision-makers to think about sustainability in a user-centred, holistic way, identifying overlaps and trade-offs as the drivers of decision-making.

    See the  website for more details.
  • Design Against Crime Solution Centre
    University of Salford
    February 2007– April 2008, part time

    A small portfolio of research projects exploring the issues around crime and fear of crime.
  • Inclusive and Sustainable Infrastructure for Tourism and Urban Regeneration (InSITU)
    University of Salford
    November 2005 – January 2007, part time

    A 15-month, £150,000, EPSRC-funded research project that developed and tested new tools and resources designed to deliver a more inclusive and sustainable infrastructure where tourism is being nurtured as a catalyst to regenerate disadvantaged areas that are rich in built heritage.  

    Prior to her work in academia, Joanne spent eight years working within a Manchester advertising and design agency after moving to the UK from America.

Publications

  • Leach JM, Miller-Hooks E (2024) . London, UKCRIC.
  • Miller-Hooks E, Leach JM (2024) e. London: UKCRIC.
  • Kearney J, Bryson JR, Broome M, Leach J, Luiu C, Pope F, and Radcliffe J (2024) Shocks, Recovery Processes and Cultivating Urban Plasticity: A Neuroplasticity-Informed Perspective on Urban Resilience, in Andres L, Bryson JR, Ersoy A and Reardon L (Eds) , Edward Elgar Publishing: Cheltenham.
  • Leach JM (2024) . Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering Sustainability 177(2), 55-56
  • Rogers CDF, Grayson N, Sadler JP, Champan L, Bouch CJ, Cavada M and Leach JM (2023) . Frontiers in Sustainable Cities 5:1171996  
  • Rogers CDF, Makana L, Leach JM (2023). . Birmingham: University 麻豆精选
  • Leach JM (2022). Valuing our Green Spaces. Issue 2, 168-169
  • Leach JM (2022). Why Biophilic Cities. Issue 1, 116-119
  • Leach JM (2022) Editorial. 175(1), 1-2
  • Bryson JR, Cox E, Leach JM, Luiu C, Radcliffe J, Reardon L (2022) 93(1), 7-14
  • Leach JM, Powrie W, Stringfellow A (2020) . London: The UK Collaboratorium for Research on Infrastructure and Cities (UKCRIC)
  • Leach JM, Rogers CDF (2020) . Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers – Smart Infrastructure and Construction, 173(2): 19-23
  • Leach JM, Rogers CDF (2019) London: UK Collaboratorium for Research in Infrastructure and Cities
  • Leach JM, Rogers CDF, Ortegon-Sanchez A and Tyler N (2020). . Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers – Engineering Sustainability, 173(1): 8-19. Winner of the 2020 Richard Trevithick Fund Prize for excellence
  • Leach JM, Mulhall RA, Rogers CDF and Bryson JR (2019) Reading cities: Developing an urban diagnostics approach for identifying integrated urban problems with application to the city 麻豆精选, UK. Cities 86: 136-144,
  • Urry J, Leach JM, Dunn N, Coulton C and The Liveable Cities Team (2017) Lancaster: Imagination Lancaster, Lancaster University.
  • Leach JM, Lee SE, Boyko CT, Coulton CJ, Cooper R, Smith N, Joffe H, Büchs M, Hale JD, Sadler JP, Braithwaite PA, Blunden LS, DeLaurentiis V, Hunt DVL, Bahaj AS, Barnes K, Bouch CJ, Bourikas L, Cavada M, Chilvers A, Clune SJ, Collins B, Cosgrave E, Dunn N, Falkingham J, James P, Kwami C, Locret-Collet M, Medda F, Ortegon A, Pollastri S, Popan C, Psarikidou K, Tyler N, Urry J, Wu Y, Zeeb V, Rogers CDF (2017). . Data in Brief. 15: 691-695.
  • Leach JM, Lee SE, Hunt DVL and Rogers CDF (2017). . Cities. 71:80-87.
  • Rogers CDF, Hunt DVL, Leach JM, Purnell P and Roelich KE (2017). . 170(2): 1-4.
  • Boyko CT, Clune CJ, Cooper RFD, Coulton CJ, Dunn NS, Pollastri S, Leach JM, Bouch CJ, et al. (2017). Sustainability. 9(5): 701.
  • Lee SE, Braithwaite PA, Leach JM and Rogers CDF (2016). . Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews. 65: 1299-1309.
  • Leach  JM, Braithwaite PA, Lee SE, Bouch CJ, Hunt DVL and Rogers CDF (2016). . International Journal of Complexity in Applied Science and Technology (IJCAST). 1(1): 86-106.
  • Juned S, Leach JM, Boyko CT, Cooper R, Woodeson A, Eyre J, Rogers CDF (2015). Do sustainability measures constrain creativity in urban design? The Municipal Journal. Online: http://themj.co.uk/Do-sustainability-measures-constrain-creativity-in-urban-design/200996 22 June 2015.
  • Hale JD, Pugh TAM, Sadler JP, Boyko CT, Brown J, Caputo S, Caserio M, Coles R, Farmani R, Hales C, Horsey R, Hunt DVL, Leach JM, Rogers CDF and MacKenzie AR (2015). Delivering a Multi-Functional and Resilient Urban Forest. Sustainability 7:4600-4624; doi:10.3390/su7044600;
  • Leach JM, Bartle I, Hale JD, Bouch CJ, Boyko CT, Lee SE, de Laurentiis V, Cavada M, Locret-Collet M, Hunt DVL, Sadler JP, Rogers CDF (2015). Critical infrastructures and sharing: implications for UK centralised infrastructure systems. International Symposium for Next Generation Infrastructure, Washington D.C., USA, 14-15 September
  • Hunt DVL, Leach JM, Lee SE, Bouch CJ, Braithwaite PA, Rogers, CDF (2014). Material Flow Analysis (MFA) for Liveable Cities. The 4th World Sustainability Forum 1-30 November 2014 - Conference Proceedings Paper
  • Leach JM, Boyko CT, Cooper R, Woodeson A, Eyre J, Rogers CDF (2014). Proceedings of the ICE: Urban Design and Planning. 168(1): 30-41. DOI: 10.1680/udap.13.00034. Winner of the 2015 Reed Mallik prize for the best paper published in the journal that year. Most downloaded paper 2017
  • Lee SE, Leach JM, Hunt DVL, Rogers CDF (2014). . ISNGI 2014. Vienna, 30 September – 1 October 2014.
  • Lee SE, Braithwaite PA, Severance S, Leach JM, Rogers CDF (2014) A Tale of Two Cities: A Study of the Energy Systems in Birmingham, an Industrialised City in central UK and Masdar City, a Developing City in the Middle East. CESARE 2014, Amman, Jordan, 24-27 April
  • Rogers CDF, Shipley J, Blythe P, Braithwaite PA, Brown C, Collins BS, Juned S, MacKenzie AR, Miller R, Pawlyn M, Price J, Swain C, Tight MR, Tindale S, Toyne P and Leach JM (2014) . Birmingham: University 麻豆精选, ISBN 978-0-7044-2843-0
  • Leach JM, Lee SE, Braithwaite PA, Bouch CJ, Grayson N, Rogers CDF (2013). What Makes a City Liveable? Implications for Next-Generation Infrastructure Services. In . Wollongong, Australia, 1-4 October 2013. Wollongong: Smart Infrastructure Facility. 397 – 405
  • Lombardi DR, Leach JM, Rogers CDF, Aston R, Barber A, Boyko CT, Brown J, Bryson J, Butler D, Caputo S, Caserio M, Coles R, Cooper R, Coyne R, Farmani R, Gaterell M, Hale J, Hales C, Hewitt CN, Hunt DVL, Jancovic L, Jefferson I, MacKenzie AR, Memon FA, Phenix-Walker R, Pugh TAM, Sadler JP, Weingaertner C and Whyatt JD (2012) . Bracknell: IHS BRE Press
  • Hunt, D. V. L., Lombardi, D.R., Atkinson, S., Barber, A., Barnes. M., Boyko, C., Brown, J. Bryson, J., Butler, D., Caputo, S., Caserio, M., Coles, R., Cooper, R., Farmani, R., Gaterell, M, J. Hale, J., Hales, C., Hewitt, N., Jankovic, L., Jefferson, I., Leach, J.M., MacKenzie, A. R., Memon, F.A., Pugh, T.A.M., Sadler, J.P., Weingaertner, C., Whyatt, D. and Rogers, C.D.F. (2012) Using scenarios to explore urban UK futures: A review of the literature 1997 to 2011. CD ROM in: Lombardi et.al. (2012) Designing Resilient Cities: A Guide to Good Practice.  Bracknell, UK: IHS BRE Press.
  • Rogers CDF, Lombardi DR, Leach JM and Cooper RF. (2012) The urban futures methodology applied to urban regeneration. Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers – Engineering Sustainability 165(1): 5-20
  • Boyko, C. T., Gaterell, M. R., Barber, A. R. G., Brown, J., Bryson, J.R., Butler, D., Caputo, S. Caserio, M., Coles, R., Cooper, R., Davies, G., Farmani, R., Hale, J., Hales, A.C., Hewitt, N., Hunt, D. V. L, Jankovic, L., Jefferson, I., Leach, J.M., Lombardi, D.R., MacKenzie, A.R., Memon, F.A., Pugh, T. A. M., Sadler, J.P., Weingaertner, C., Whyatt, J.D., & Rogers, C.D.F. (2012) Benchmarking Sustainability in Cities: The role of indicators and future scenarios. Global Environmental Change - 22 (1), 245-254 12/04/2011) (IF = 4.918, IF5 7.84)  doi:10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2011.10.004
  • Hunt, D.V.L.; Lombardi, D.R.; Atkinson, S.; Barber, A.; Barnes, M.; Boyko, C.T.; Brown, J.; Bryson, J.; Butler, D.; Caputo, S.; Caserio, M.; Coles, R.; Farmani, R.; Gaterell, M.; Hale, J.; Hales, C.; Hewitt, C.N.; Jankovic, L.; Jefferson, I.; Leach, J; Mackenzie, A.R.; Memon, F.A..; Whyatt, D.; Weingartner, C. and  Rogers, C.D.F.;  (2012) Scenario Archetypes: Converging rather than Diverging Themes. In Sustainability journal 4 (4), 740-772; doi:10.3390/su4040740
  • Hunt, D.; Lombardi, R.; Atkinson, S.; Barber, A.; Barnes, M.; Boyko, C.; Brown, J.; Bryson, J.; Butler, D.; Caputo, S.; Caserio, M.; Coles, R.; Farmani, R.; Gaterell, M.; Hale, J.; Hayes, C.; Hewitt, N.; Jankovic, L.; Jefferson, I.; Leach, J.; Mackenzie, R.; Memon, F.; Pugh, T.; Rogers, C.; Whyatt, D.; Weingartner, C. Scenario Archetypes: Converging rather than Diverging Themes. In Proceedings of the 1st World Sustainability Forum, 1-30 November 2011; Sciforum Electronic Conferences Series. http://www.sciforum.net/presentation/720
  • Leach JM, Rogers CDF, Cooper R, Cooper I, Luger J (2010) Sustainable Urban Environments Research Dialogues.  University 麻豆精选
  • Leach, JM.  2009.  Adapting design management tools and techniques to meet the needs of a small charity.  MSc dissertation, University of Salford: Salford, Greater Manchester