Goal of The Project: Design To Improve The Healing Experience. Quality of Care Is Directly Related To The Quality of
Goal of The Project: Design To Improve The Healing Experience. Quality of Care Is Directly Related To The Quality of
Goal of The Project: Design To Improve The Healing Experience. Quality of Care Is Directly Related To The Quality of
Design to improve the healing experience. Quality of care is directly related to the quality of
the healthcare interior design. We create healthcare environments that complement and
enhance our clients' universalgoal to provide compassionate care. ... We understand that
the healthcare environment is complex.
Quality of care is directly related to the quality of the healthcare interior design. We create healthcare
environments that complement and enhance our clients' universal goal to provide compassionate
care. Our collaborative design process ensures the delivery of enduring environments which address
the needs of your community while balancing issues such as image, budget, functional efficiency,
future flexibility and on-going maintenance.
We understand that the healthcare environment is complex. Our specialized team of healthcare
interior designers will collaborate with your team to identify and implement safe, maintainable,
supportive settings by balancing sophisticated technology with access to nature, enhancing
productivity and morale with thoughtful detailing and effective space usage; accommodating
flexibility with careful planning.
Hospitals are the most complex of building types. Each hospital is comprised of a wide
range of services and functional units. These include diagnostic and treatment functions,
such as clinical laboratories, imaging, emergency rooms, and surgery; hospitality functions,
such as food service and housekeeping; and the fundamental inpatient care or bed-related
function. This diversity is reflected in the breadth and specificity of regulations, codes, and
oversight that govern hospital construction and operations. Each of the wide-ranging and
constantly evolving functions of a hospital, including highly complicated mechanical,
electrical, and telecommunications systems, requires specialized knowledge and expertise.
No one person can reasonably have complete knowledge, which is why specialized
consultants play an important role in hospital planning and design. The functional units
within the hospital can have competing needs and priorities. Idealized scenarios and
strongly-held individual preferences must be balanced against mandatory requirements,
actual functional needs (internal traffic and relationship to other departments), and the
financial status of the organization.
THERAPEUTIC ENVIRONMENT
Hospital patients are often fearful and confused and these feelings may impede recovery.
Every effort should be made to make the hospital stay as unthreatening, comfortable, and
stress-free as possible. The interior designer plays a major role in this effort to create
a therapeutic environment. A hospital's interior design should be based on a comprehensive
understanding of the facility's mission and its patient profile. The characteristics of the
patient profile will determine the degree to which the interior design should address aging,
loss of visual acuity, other physical and mental disabilities, and abusiveness. (See VA
Interior Design Manual.) Some important aspects of creating a therapeutic interior are:
Using familiar and culturally relevant materials wherever consistent with sanitation
and other functional needs
Using cheerful and varied colors and textures, keeping in mind that some colors are
inappropriate and can interfere with provider assessments of patients' pallor and skin
tones, disorient older or impaired patients, or agitate patients and staff, particularly
some psychiatric patients.
Admitting ample natural light wherever feasible and using color-corrected lighting in
interior spaces which closely approximates natural daylight
Providing views of the outdoors from every patient bed, and elsewhere wherever
possible; photo murals of nature scenes are helpful where outdoor views are not
available
Designing a "way-finding" process into every project. Patients, visitors, and staff all
need to know where they are, what their destination is, and how to get there and
return. A patient's sense of competence is encouraged by making spaces easy to
find, identify, and use without asking for help. Building elements, color, texture, and
pattern should all give cues, as well as artwork and signage
CONTROLLED CIRCULATION
A hospital is a complex system of interrelated functions requiring constant movement of
people and goods. Much of this circulation should be controlled.
Outpatients visiting diagnostic and treatment areas should not travel through
inpatient functional areas nor encounter severely ill inpatients
Typical outpatient routes should be simple and clearly defined
Visitors should have a simple and direct route to each patient nursing unit without
penetrating other functional areas
Separate patients and visitors from industrial/logistical areas or floors
Outflow of trash, recyclables, and soiled materials should be separated from
movement of food and clean supplies, and both should be separated from routes of
patients and visitors
Transfer of cadavers to and from the morgue should be out of the sight of patients
and visitors
Dedicated service elevators for deliveries, food and building maintenance services
AESTHETICS
Aesthetics is closely related to creating a therapeutic environment (homelike, attractive.) It
is important in enhancing the hospital's public image and is thus an important marketing
tool. A better environment also contributes to better staff morale and patient care. Aesthetic
considerations include: