A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Functional Hospitals for Humans
Hospital architecture deals with high complexity, due to the high variability of diverse and complex users (health professionals, patients, caregivers, visitors); the flows generated by living in hospitals; the activities carried out and the equipment and technological infrastructures involved that constantly change and evolve. The history of hospitals shows that hospitals have dealt with organizational and spatial issues due to the challenges posed by continuous technical, scientific and social developments. Moreover, it is widely recognized that the hospital environment in terms of layout configuration and spatial characteristics has an impact on how people move, act, and behave in space, as well as on their perception and well-being.
The aim of this paper is to increase awareness in this field, through the analysis of different case studies and best practices, to support the design process in promoting environmental comfort and users’ well-being. Understanding how to manage complexity in hospitals with an effective and flexible design could affect users’ proactive behaviors and improve energy efficiency, costs and perceived environmental quality by all “humans” (patients, staff and visitors). This aspect deals particularly with the management of flows and the layout organization of functional areas that could have a real impact on the environment by the separation of paths and user flows, the wayfinding and ease of orientation, the reduction of distances covered, the relations generated by designing spaces and eliminating architectural barriers (physical, mental and sensory).
Many studies about the design impact focus on specific hospital functional areas, but more studies are necessary to consider the hospital as a whole system. This research is going to contribute to the knowledge of new models of typologies and flows in the conception phase of the hospital and address complexity by providing “functional hospitals for humans”.
Functional Hospitals for Humans
Hospital architecture deals with high complexity, due to the high variability of diverse and complex users (health professionals, patients, caregivers, visitors); the flows generated by living in hospitals; the activities carried out and the equipment and technological infrastructures involved that constantly change and evolve. The history of hospitals shows that hospitals have dealt with organizational and spatial issues due to the challenges posed by continuous technical, scientific and social developments. Moreover, it is widely recognized that the hospital environment in terms of layout configuration and spatial characteristics has an impact on how people move, act, and behave in space, as well as on their perception and well-being.
The aim of this paper is to increase awareness in this field, through the analysis of different case studies and best practices, to support the design process in promoting environmental comfort and users’ well-being. Understanding how to manage complexity in hospitals with an effective and flexible design could affect users’ proactive behaviors and improve energy efficiency, costs and perceived environmental quality by all “humans” (patients, staff and visitors). This aspect deals particularly with the management of flows and the layout organization of functional areas that could have a real impact on the environment by the separation of paths and user flows, the wayfinding and ease of orientation, the reduction of distances covered, the relations generated by designing spaces and eliminating architectural barriers (physical, mental and sensory).
Many studies about the design impact focus on specific hospital functional areas, but more studies are necessary to consider the hospital as a whole system. This research is going to contribute to the knowledge of new models of typologies and flows in the conception phase of the hospital and address complexity by providing “functional hospitals for humans”.
Functional Hospitals for Humans
Innovative Renewable Energy
Sayigh, Ali (editor) / Bellini, Elena (author) / Setola, Nicoletta (author) / Caserta, Giuseppe (author)
2023-09-08
12 pages
Article/Chapter (Book)
Electronic Resource
English
Damage to Functional Components in Hospitals and Museums
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2000
|General Hospitals : Functional studies on the main departments
TIBKAT | 1961
|Engineering Index Backfile | 1948
Online Contents | 1993
Engineering Index Backfile | 1952