# Community-based participatory research in a “Shitamachi” neighborhood in Tokyo: building social capital and relational spaces for community health

**Authors:** Daisuke Son, Toshichika Mitsuyama, Yuzuki Matsushita

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12889-026-26475-5 · BMC Public Health · 2026-02-11

## TL;DR

A community health project in Tokyo used participatory research and a mobile café to foster social connections and redefine health through cultural engagement.

## Contribution

This study introduces a culturally embedded, art-based CBPR model that reframes health as relational and experiential in aging urban communities.

## Key findings

- The Mobile Yatai de Health Café created salutogenic encounters that blurred boundaries between health, art, and sociability.
- Participants described health as relational, expressive, and experiential rather than biomedical.
- The project fostered 'relational commons' through culturally grounded collaboration in Tokyo's Shitamachi neighborhood.

## Abstract

Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) offers a relational framework for bridging scientific inquiry and everyday life. Yet its adaptation to Japan’s urban contexts—where dense traditions coexist with social fragmentation—remains underexplored.

Since 2015, the YaNeSen CBPR has linked residents, physicians, and researchers in Tokyo’s historic Shitamachi district of Yanaka–Nezu–Sendagi to co-create health-promoting spaces grounded in local culture. Using ethnographic fieldwork, community asset mapping, and collaborative action, the team developed the “Mobile Yatai de Health Café”—a movable wooden stall that was intermittently deployed between 2016 and 2020 to serve coffee and invite spontaneous street-level dialogue between residents and care professionals. Follow-up interviews with 12 participants in 2021 were thematically analyzed to assess long-term transformations.

Early engagement revealed temples, public baths, and alleys as “third places” sustaining social capital. The Mobile Yatai extended this ecology by generating salutogenic encounters that blurred boundaries between health, art, and everyday sociability. Interview narratives described the project as a “space of relational invitation” (kakawari-shiro) characterized by openness, serious play, and an ethics of non-obligation. Participants reported a broadened sense of health as relational, expressive, and experiential rather than biomedical.

The YaNeSen CBPR demonstrates how culturally embedded, art-based collaboration can nurture “relational commons” that sustain well-being in aging urban communities. By valuing presence, ambiguity, and care over prescriptive intervention, this study reframes health as convivial coexistence through culturally embedded participatory art.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** infection (MESH:D007239), COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

3 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12998152/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12998152