Chakraborty, ShreyontiShreyontiChakrabortySullivan, William C.William C.SullivanCHUN-YEN CHANGBarton, AllenAllenBartonEbata, AaronAaronEbata2026-03-132026-03-132026-02-1800139165https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105030567849https://scholars.lib.ntu.edu.tw/handle/123456789/736278Families in high-density urban settings often experience elevated conflict, yet the role of nearby outdoor spaces in shaping these dynamics is underexplored. We examined whether frequent visits to approachable outdoor spaces—defined as within a 5-minute walk and perceived safe from common threats—buffer the link between household crowding and family conflict. Survey data were collected from 142 married women with children living in higher-income apartments in the Mumbai Metropolitan Region, India. Participants reported household density, perceived proximity and safety of urban outdoor spaces, perceived frequency of visits, and perceived family conflict, along with household composition and psychological distress. Zero-order correlations showed perceived approachability, but not frequency of visits, was associated with conflict. Moderated regression analyses indicated more frequent visits only to highly approachable (versus less approachable) outdoor spaces were linked with lower conflict. Findings underscore that usability—particularly proximity and safety—matters when evaluating outdoor environments as supports for families in dense cities.falsecrowding densityfamily functioninghousing residential (single-familymultifamily)quantitative researchresearch methodsresearch setting place typeresidential outdoor spacesrestorativenesssurvey researchPerceived Family Conflict Under High Household Density: Could Frequent Visits to Approachable Urban Outdoor Spaces Potentially Be a Mitigator?journal article10.1177/001391652614205802-s2.0-105030567849