
If you observe people drink for long enough, you’ll notice a little bit. The pint glasses quickly empty at a dimly lit bar on a Friday, practically without anybody making a choice. The same group of friends may spend an hour nursing a single bottle outside on a bench by a river while conversing, daydreaming, or watching a dog chase a tennis ball into the water. The folks are the same. The same drink. Somewhere else. Another night.
For a long time, the industry chose not to give this any thought. Bars were intended to keep you placing orders. There are no windows, no clocks, dim lights, and music that beats just over 120 beats per minute. For years, researchers have been recording these effects, and the results are clear: on premise venues are associated with higher hourly consumption than off premise ones, in part due to the constant cues. The fragrance of someone else’s beer, drink specials, neon, and music with alcohol related lyrics. The room is being sold.
But when you go outside, something changes. According to a 2021 Swiss event level research that monitored young persons hour by hour on weekend nights, being off premise at home, in a park, or near a riverbank was associated with fewer drinks per hour than being at a bar. That was to be anticipated. The interaction effect was what caught the researchers off guard. Drinking increases more quickly in an outdoor or home environment than it does at a bar with the same number of patrons. On its own, the park is kinder, but if it becomes a party, the lack of regulations affects everyone.
| Reference Information | Details |
|---|---|
| Topic | The influence of outdoor and green spaces on alcohol consumption |
| Field | Behavioural science, environmental psychology, public health |
| Key Research Institutions | University of Plymouth, University of Stirling, University of Exeter |
| Notable Study | Health & Place journal — link between visible greenspace and reduced cravings |
| Demographic Focus | Young adults (15–24), sober-curious adults, outdoor recreation communities |
| Related Movements | Sober-curious culture, social prescribing, “green prescriptions” |
The fact that outside areas had no influence whatsoever on drinking may be the most truthful finding of the study. They adopt a stance. The temptation seems to be lessened by peaceful outside spaces like a garden, a seat, or a stroll. Loud outdoor events, such as a festival field at nightfall or a beach cookout with a coffin sized cooler, might have the opposite effect because no one is around and everyone has their own.
It becomes really intriguing when it comes to the vegetation research. Working with academics at Exeter, a team from the University of Plymouth examined people who could merely *see* green space from their homes not go across it or engage in physical activity.
According to the study, which was published in Health & Place, residential views with more than 25% greenery were linked to less frequent and intense desires for unhealthy foods, alcohol, and cigarettes. Similar work was done with garden or allotment access. Even when physical exercise was removed from the equation, the impact persisted. It seems that simply gazing at trees has an effect.
Researchers feel that there is still more to learn about this process. Some believe that the body’s alarm system is lowered by natural settings due to stress control, and a calmer nervous system is less thirsty. Some rely on identification, believing that a person who walks the canal path on Saturday mornings learns to view themselves differently from someone whose Saturday starts at midday at the bar.
In interviews, Wendy Masterton, a PhD researcher at the University of Stirling who examines the relationship between green space and substance use, phrases it very subtly: participants in her studies felt *different* after spending time outside, not just better. Some described it as being more like themselves. It’s difficult to quantify on a chart, but it’s also difficult to ignore.
It’s difficult to ignore the timing when you watch something develop in relation to the larger cultural moment. The sober curious trend isn’t a marketing gimmick; non alcoholic beverages are now a legitimate category, and outdoor recreation groups especially those involved in hiking and climbing have begun to publicly challenge the trail beer routine.
Run clubs that conclude at a coffee cart rather than a pub are becoming more and more common. Nobody knows yet if this is a generational attitude or a permanent restructuring. As is typical, the data lags behind the trend.
The ramifications for planning are serious, though. If a view of trees can satisfy a yearning, then how cities are constructed, where parks are located, who gets a green window, and whose estates were given concrete and which were given a square of grass become subtle public health issues.
Through social prescribing, the UK has been moving closer to “green prescriptions”, with Scotland leading the way. It’s not late. The infrastructure for directing a patient away from a bottle and into a walking group is still mostly dependent on a general practitioner who is aware of it.
Walking through any city on a nice evening these days reveals how drastically the public outdoor drinking culture has evolved. Benches beside the canal with craft lager cans. picnic blankets with one glass and a bottle of orange wine. The park serves as a sort of third location that is lighter than a house, a bar, or a place that is controlled. There are still drinkers. Simply put, they tend to drink differently. Quicker. with more breaks.
Whether the green space effect can be reverse engineered into a therapy or if it mostly serves as a background that facilitates other options is still up for debate. The path of travel is intriguing. People were drawn inside for a century by the architecture of drinking. Some of them are now being drawn back outside toward a window, a seat, or a walkway along the lake, and the drink they are holding, if they have one at all, is quieter for it.
i) https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8738772/
ii) https://joinclubsoda.com/hub/getting-outdoors-sobriety/
iii) https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/0267257X.2025.2510942