Quick - how many facilities can you think of that are used 24/7, 365 days per year' Perhaps your first thought was of a few megastore or convenience-store chains. Or maybe a prison. Recently, I traveled to Las Vegas, and have added casinos to the list.
Most important on the list are hospitals. Fortunately for us, hospitals never close. Yet being open all the time takes its toll on the facility, as a wide range of workers are always on the job.Â
It also poses maintenance challenges, because cleaning and other work needs to be done while care-related functions continue.
These are just a few of the many challenges facing healthcare interior design today.
There are a host of codes and regulations that must be adhered to, such as Public Health codes, Fire Marshal codes, HIPAA/privacy issues, and infection-control constraints, just to name a few.
In hospitals, there are people's emotions at every level - from the extreme joy at the birth of a healthy baby, to the extreme grief of a loved one's sudden and tragic death.
There are facility users of all sorts: staff, doctors, patients, visitors, volunteers, consultants, sales representatives, delivery personnel, and clergy. Â
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There is every level of education and every level of job - from housekeeping to brain surgery and everything in between.
And of course, there are budgets!
Armed with all of these challenges, the healthcare client comes to the interior designer and says, "Here you go. Oh, and by the way, be creative! Make our space flexible for uses we don't even know about yet. Make our space functional and beautiful and life enhancing.Â
Help us create a space that we can use to recruit and retain staff, and use for marketing our services in this extremely competitive market."Â Delivering effective and appealing solutions
to these challenges is very satisfying, and for me, being able to affect someone's healthcare experience in a positive way is as good as it gets.
Given these parameters, where does a healthcare interior designer start' With communication. First and foremost, talking with a client to gain an understanding of their facility, their needs, and their expectations is key. After that, the interior designer must develop ideas and options for further consideration. Most often, these ideas manifest as themes that offer a meaningful story for the healthcare facility.Â
Inspiration can come at any time from any place. For one project, I was inspired by a book that a facility used in its leadership training. "The Man Who Planted Trees" talked about a shepherd who planted 100 acorns each day for 40 years, transforming a barren land into a lush forest. The hospital admired the shepherd's many qualities - such as caring, patience, persistence, and commitment - and wanted to use this as an example of how one person has the ability and power to make a profound difference to their surroundings. An indomitable spirit of committed people can make a visible and tangible difference in the world. These were important characteristics for the hospital leadership to have.
With this as a starting point, I thought of an acorn and what it becomes in the future: a tree.Â
A "tree of life" as a metaphor for the hospital was very fitting. I took it one step further and thought, what do we love about trees in West Michigan' Trees change dramatically with the changing seasons. Next, I had to translate this into a tangible design concept. I did this by dividing the floor plan into four areas, one for each season. I used blue and green (basic colors found in nature) as the mainstay color palette to unify the space, then changed accent colors and patterns to reflect each season. To facilitate wayfinding in the facility, I used icons such as an acorn, a leaf, a flower, and the sun. This created an environment that was both appropriate and meaningful to this particular healthcare facility.
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This is just one example of how interior design can be used to personalize and give meaning to a healthcare facility. To stay competitive in a fiercely competitive market is no small task. Smartly planned interior design can support a facility's vision to be a destination of choice.
Courses For Interior Design
Decorating homes with the environment and health in mind can be done without any loss of style Although we understand the health benefits of eating natural or organic food, perversely we have been slow to recognize that how we decorate our homes can also affect our wellbeing. Modern paints, for example, are typically made from vinyl resins and petrochemicals. These not only ?out-gas? volatile organic compounds (VOCs) but being non-porous prevent walls from breathing turning rooms into plastic boxes. Non-toxic, breathable finishes ? using linseed oil, natural pigments and minerals, and even milk, say ? rival and often surpass their modern counterparts for longevity, colour depth and finishes. To partner these, there are masses of stylish options for natural or eco floorings, like linoleum or coir and seagrass matting, and surfaces and wall coverings using recycled glass or old Wellington boots, would you believe it?
Surfaces Dapple Glass www.dappleglass.com
Shimmering accent tiles created from glass cullet to resemble crushed jewels.
DURAT www.durat.com
A tactile, solid-surface material available in an extensive range of speckled colours. Designed for worktops and tabletops it can also be cast into basins, shower trays and baths. Made with 50% recycled plastic it is itself 100% recyclable.
Eight Inch www.eightinch.co.uk
Jazzy, hardwearing composite material made from 85% recycled glass chips and solvent-free resins. Available in numerous colour combinations and aggregate sizes it can be cast into practically any shape or used as a seamless flooring screed.
Recycled glass tiles available plain or patterned in clear, blue, green or amber.
Smile Plastics www.smile-plastics.co.uk
Fun sheet materials suitable for flooring, worktops and cladding and the like, ingeniously recycled from Wellington boots, squeezy bottles, yoghurt pots, bank notes, reject toothbrushes and crisp packets.
Smith & Wareham www.smithandwareham.co.uk
Recycled glass mosaic tiles in 16 colours.
Flooring
Concept Carpets www.concept-carpet.co.uk
Luxurious tufted carpets made in Britain with Jacob wool. Free from bleaching agents, chemical dyes and insect and stain repellents, the Jacob's Velvet comes in three natural colours ? cream, pewter and dark brown ? as well as five attractive marled versions.
Dalsouple www.dalsouple.com
DalNaturel is a ?new generation? natural rubber floor covering featuring over 90% natural ingredients (most ?rubber? flooring is actually made from SBR, a petrochemical by-product).
Forbo-Nairn www.forbo-flooring.co.uk
Retro-style Marmoleum flooring is made from linseed oil, chalk, wood flour, and pine resin. Available in a wide selection of plain and marbled colours, it comes as both a 200cm wide sheet and as a tile (333 by 333mm square).
Kersaint Cobb www.kersaintcobb.co.uk
Natural coir, jute, seagrass and sisal floor coverings backed with natural latex.
Panda Flooring www.pandaflooring.co.uk
?Hardwood? flooring made from bamboo, the most environmentally friendly plant resource on account of its growth rate.
Siesta Cork Tile www.siestacorktiles.co.uk
Insulating, noise-absorbing, flexible cork floor and wall tiles made from harvestable tree bark in numerous colours, thicknesses and finishes.
The Waveney Rush Industry www.waveneyrush.co.uk Sweet-smelling carpets and matting handmade from natural, renewable rush fibre.
Paints and Finishes Auro www.auroorganic.co.uk
Gloss and eggshell for woodwork and various wall paints as well as a huge range of wood stains, waxes, oils, decorating adhesives, fillers and even paint stripping paste, all free from petrochemicals.
Francesca's Paints www.francescaspaint.com
Traditional lime wash (interior and exterior), ?chalky? emulsion, flat oil, eggshell, gloss, masonry and water-based, breathable ?eco emulsion? paints, all tinted with natural pigments and mixed by hand in 146 shades.
Matt, water-based emulsion and interior and exterior eggshell paints in 30 muted colours
Precious Earth www.preciousearth.co.uk Environmentally friendly, low-impact finishes and flooring outlet in Ludlow offering a specialist design consultancy.
Ray Munn www.raymunn.com
Stockists of the Beckers range of eco-friendly paints, varnishes and finishes from Sweden, which offers a computerized colour-matching service.
Contemporary furniture for the home. Storage, shelving and home office furniture, offering contemporary style and sustainability www.ottofurniture.com. Further information on eco furniture, eco designers and eco-retailers is available on this site.
Both Mary Bamborough & Jonathan Howkins are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Mary Bamborough has sinced written about articles on various topics from Medical Healthcare. Mary Bamborough, IIDA is Director of Interior Design at GMB Architects-Engineers in Holland, Michigan. She has 18 years of healthcare interior design experience.
Camera For Landscape Photography Colour graduated filters should be left at home or placed in the bin - colour graduated filters work by creating un-natural colours, destroying your final print