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More than 150 architects, designers, healthcare consultants, and
owner representatives gathered in Chicago in mid-July 2007 for a
discussion titled "Healthcare Public Spaces and the Power of
Design." The discussion was part of the annual Academy of
Architecture for Health (AAH) Summer Leadership Conference.
A number of conclusions can be drawn from this discussion. One
is that healthcare public space is not just one kind of space; it
takes different forms or patterns, five of which our discussion
identified. Another conclusion is that although healthcare public
space is usually thought of as background or support space, it can
be just as important as clinical space to the healing process.
Architects, when designing healthcare public space, typically
describe it functionally. Our discussion made it clear the design
process must look beyond physical parameters. A possible tool for
doing this is a matrix that integrates the type of healthcare
public space with healthcares unique identity attributes.
Because of the importance of healthcare public space, solid
research about it is needed. Participants in the discussion agreed
that they want to continue the dialogue that we started about this
space.
Poster Power
First, how do we define healthcare public space? How can we use
this space to enhance the design of healthcare facilities? Before
beginning our discussion, we viewed a PowerPoint presentation (some
slides from which are shown below) to help establish a vocabulary
and a tool to facilitate audience dialogue.
To stimulate thinking about healthcare public spaces, attendees
were asked in advance to create and submit an 11 x 17
poster representing their favorite public space. No other
limitations or definitions were given.
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| St. Marks Plaza,
Venice |
The response was rewarding and revealing. More than 20 posters
were submitted and displayed. Among the spaces chosen were such
monumental, well-known sites as St. Marks Plaza in Venice,
the Mosque of the Prophet in Saudi Arabia, Chicagos Crown
Fountain Millennium Park, the beach in Venice, Calif., and
Bostons Fenway Park. The posters also included smaller, more
personal spaces and healthcare public spaces. It was clear that the
spaces identified by those submitting posters were the product of a
fond memory or experience. Reviewing the posters, I observed human
emotion, spirit, magic, and the importance of place.
The variety of public spaces represented by the posters
underscored the difficulty of defining healthcare public space.
Indeed, the posters made me realize that the topic of healthcare
public space is more abstract than I had initially realized. But
the posters also were a huge help in advancing our discussion.
Those submitting posters were personally vested in them, so they
were able to explain their selection criteria (e.g., the space made
me feel good, evoked a memory, was spiritually uplifting). They
also were able to articulate how the space selected related to the
topic of healthcare public space.
Defining Public Space
The term public suggests a place providing
access to all, a place where people can congregate and engage in
multiple activities, a place of movement and flow, or a place of
cultural collectiveness. How then to define public
space? We can do this in two related ways.
The first is through formal typologies such as
- Organizing elements (plaza, courtyards, lobbies)
- Dynamic conduits (streets, passages, transit)
- Transition zones (boundaries, edges, parks)
The second way is through attributes such as
- Environmental factors (light and air, energy, habitat)
- Users (purpose, together/alone experience)
- Public-to-private relationships (parameters, defining
condition, animation)
- Architectural character (proportion, materials, scape)
The History of Healthcare Public Space
When attempting to define healthcare public space,
its useful to recall some history. Initially places for
healing were truly public, sought out for their special qualities
of place and environment. One example was the Asclepieion at
Epidaurus in ancient Greece, the most celebrated healing center of
the classical world. After spending the night there in a big hall,
the sick reported their dreams to a priest the following day. He
then prescribed a cure, often a visit to the baths.
In the Middle Ages, the Catholic Church assumed the role of
caring for the sick and dying. In its healing centers, patient
wards opened to gardens and chapels, and active public spaces were
used by patients and the general public.
During the Industrial Age, medicine realized that germs cause
illness and that pollution can trigger disease in immune-stressed
patients. The sick were separated from the healthy. Buildings
became more compartmentalized and hermetically sealed. Private
space became more important than public spaces, which were largely
confined to the front of buildings.
Today, the assumption that patients should always be separated
and isolated is no longer the prevailing wisdom. Instead, we find
increasing emphasis on patient rights and on family participation
in caregiving and healing. Given our contemporary healthcare
environment, how does public space in general relate to healthcare
pubic space? What is similar? What is different?
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| How do healthcare needs
fit into public spaces? |
Applying Public Space Principles to Healthcare
Both public space and healthcare public space share the
same typologies and attributes described earlier. However,
healthcare public space has its own set of special patterns. (In
developing a vocabulary for healthcare public space, we owe a debt
of gratitude to Christopher Alexanders A Pattern
Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction, required reading
when I was in graduate school.)
It was our observation that healthcare public spaces embodied
the following space patterns:
- Collector space: accepting and orienting
space, high population, active and increased noise levels
- Introspective space: accepting but calming
space, high populations, personal, more quiet and highly
passive
- Purpose space: places of specific functions,
service based, varying user volumes, moderate noise level and
dynamic space
- Mover space: places of constant movement, ebb
and flow of user volumes, moderate noise levels and highly
dynamic
- Switchboard space: places of orientation and
wayfinding, constant high population, clarity of building
organization, moderate noise levels and dynamic
.jpg) |
| Healthcare public space
patterns and representative icons |
These spaces, however, must be integrated with healthcares
unique identity attributes:
- Environmental factors: natural light, air
quality
- User group: diverse and health focused
- Public-private relationships: defined by a
single entity, cohesive mission with clear interface and
boundaries
- Context of body health: people needing care
are the norm not the exception, diversity of ailments
- Passage of time: time is unpredictable,
perceived differently by patient, family, and staff
- Emotional dispositions: uncertainty and
vulnerability, emotional highs and lows
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| Healthcares unique
identity attributes and representative icons |
Using a Matrix as a Tool
In the grid below, the horizontal axis displays icons for
healthcares unique identity attributes. Displayed on the
vertical axis, also with icons, are healthcare public space
patterns. Using the grid, a particular type of space could be
designed to reflect one or more factors on the horizontal axis.
As an example, take collector space, represented by the top icon
on the vertical axis. Now consider it in relationship to the
horizontal axis. Should the space be designed to take into account
environmental factors? Should it deal with the passage of time,
which can be agonizingly slow for patients and families awaiting
test results? What other combinations are important? By asking such
questions, the grid above becomes a matrix that can serve as a work
sheet or check list of sensitivities. Indeed, using this tool
amounts to a sensitivity exercise.
.jpg) |
| Grid for combining
healthcare public spaces with identity attributes |
Conclusions
A number of conclusions can be drawn from our discussion
about public healthcare space. One is a new appreciation for the
relevance of healthcare public space. It is not one kind of space;
it can take different forms or patterns. In addition, although
healthcare public space is usually thought of as background or
support space, it is just as important as clinical space. Indeed,
it may be some of the most relevant space in the healing process,
especially when it is purposeful. By that I mean the space is
planned to promote nurturing, privacy, safety, and reassurance.
Another lesson learned from our discussion is that healthcare
public spaces do not exist in isolation. Instead, they stitch
together the entire healthcare experience, which includes the five
different healthcare public space patterns we identified. Some of
these spaces constitute seams of human interaction; others
constitute a formal stage for this interaction. Both can change
human experience in life-defining ways.
How then should we account for these spaces in the design
process? Should we have a new line item in a functional program for
the spaces? When creating healthcare public space program,
architects typically describe it functionally20 x
20, for example. Our discussion made it clear we must look
beyond these physical parameters. We must take into account the
emotional content of space. To be honest, Im not at the point
where I can articulate precisely what tools we need to accomplish
this objective, but the grid we examined seems to be a good
starting point.
The posters introduced during our discussion emphasized the
significance of a positive memory. Is it possible to create such
memories with healthcare public space? Often the birthing
experience creates a positive memory. But what about a cancer
patient that has had a tumor removed and just wants to go home and
forget about the hospital experience? How do we create a positive
memory for that patient?
As the questions posed above demonstrate, defining healthcare
public space and using it to enhance the design of healthcare
facilities presents challenges. Our Chicago meeting was an
important step in identifying those challenges. And because I know
of no more dedicated individuals than members of the AAH and the
American College of Healthcare Architects (ACHA), I am confident
that eventually we will successfully meet these challenges. As we
do this, I expect healthcare design to become increasingly
interdisciplinary. At NBBJ, our healthcare staff includes nurses,
landscape architects, lighting experts, industrial designers, an
environmental psychologist, and even an anthropologist.
Where do we go from here? Participants in the Chicago event made
it clear they want to continue the dialogue we started, emphasizing
that we only scratched the surface of an important design topic.
Another Power of Design agenda must be created. Also, we need
research on healthcare public space. As the following graphic
illustrates, there is still much we do not know. Lets not
lose the momentum we established in Chicago. Lets keep
talking.
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| The architectural
character of public space |
John Pangrazio, FAIA, FACHA, is a partner with NBBJ.
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