Adaptable Healthcare Architecture
| |

What if interactive architecture could do more than just react to its occupants? What if architecture was based on rules that could promote designated functions? In this light, architecture would be motivational and goal-oriented. Hospitals; for instance, would actually help patients to heal — instead of being cold and sterile, like so many hospitals we find today.
Adaptable architecture could help occupants have better experiences within buildings. For instance, within hospitals a rule-based architecture could help patients to do the following:
- understand their treatment
- reduce stress
- decrease pain
- engage in healing behavior
Hospital rooms could tailor their interactions toward certain illnesses, recovery and patient types. In addition, adaptive architecture could help the medical staff do a better job, making less medical errors. Of course, patient control and choice is important — and adaptive architecture should make provisions for both as it promotes functions within.
Join My Newsletter and Get a Free Copy of my Book Sign up for the FREE Sensing Architecture Newsletter to achieve breakthrough insights that will expand the way you think about architectural design. This is a great way to set your work apart from the rest. Plus, get free immediate access to Bringing Architecture to the Next Level, where you will learn how to shift your mindset to reach breakthrough ideas, meet and predict occupant need using sensory design, leverage your design process to get more with less, rethink technology to unleash your innovative edge, and so much more. ![]() Sign-Up Now for Instant Access * Your information will always be kept confidential. |
Print This Post














Comments
3 Responses to “Adaptable Healthcare Architecture”Trackbacks
Check out what others are saying about this post...[...] probability distributions” in order to give them practical and useful behaviors. (1) Similarly, interactive architecture can be programmed and optimized to behave in more useful ways that help occupants to achieve their goals — like [...]
[...] transient sensorial stimuli and information networked to help it make smart decisions — interactive and adaptive designs will call upon occupants to touch buildings more, less and differently (depending on the [...]
[...] easier to aggregate data, and then manipulate that data to design interesting frameworks and architectural design patterns that speak to your occupants in renewed ways. For, if you gain a more in depth picture of how your occupants feel when [...]