TITEL
Psychosocially supportive design in the indoor environment
FöRFATTARE
Fischl, Géza
INSTITUTION
Arbetsvetenskap / Teknisk Psykologi
SAMMANFATTNING
A built environment is psychosocially supportive, when its quality can
strengthen or sustain the ability of an individual to perform his/her role,
conduct him-/herself in society, and communicate or interact with others in
accordance to his/her values, interest, and self-concept. The aim of this
thesis was to investigate potential methods in design and re-design for
identification, visualization, and evaluation of such environmental
qualities. The thesis is divided into two main theoretical approaches of
psychosocial supportiveness.
The first approach, the psychoevolutionary, postulates that stress-related
anticipation, negative evaluation, and harm as well as emotion and aesthetics
affect the individual. Finding a methodology which reveals all these factors
in terms of environmental qualities was one of the objectives of the first
part of the thesis. An Empowering Environment Evaluation (Triple-E) tool was
developed and tested in a hospital, a health care facility, and a railway
operational environment. Initially, the Triple-E was a combination of a
structured brainstorming session, a semantic environmental description, and
an architectural aesthetical preference measure. The results of these
building performance measures indicated, that participants’ opinions about
the negative environmental aspects with respect to psychosocial
supportiveness were somewhat difficult to grasp. Nevertheless, the Triple-E
tool provided sufficient information about the psychosocial qualities of the
indoor environments to generate design scenarios. These scenarios were
constructed using a research-based design model. The evaluation of the design
scenarios showed that, overall, the indoor components like artificial light
and windows appeared to be the most psychosocially supportive entities.
The second approach, the attention restoration theory, postulates that an
environment is psychosocially supportive when restoration of depleted mental
resources can be achieved through four constructs (being away, extent,
fascination, and compatibility). To detect restoration supportive
environmental qualities, the architectural aesthetical preferences
questionnaire was modified to be sensitive on restoration (the Built
Environment Restoration Support (BERS)). Two studies were conducted, one in
Sweden and one in the Netherlands. The aim of these was to identify,
visualize, and evaluate restorative supportiveness. While the Swedish study
was a CAD-based visualization, the Dutch study was a real environment. The
framework for designing both scenarios originates from the perceptual model
of Brunswik (1956). The combination of the most frequent distal and proximal
cues provided the criteria for the restorative design scenarios. As a
conclusion, environmental components such as carpets (Persian carpet, dark
and thick, single color), windows (many and large), and doors (covered and
closed) as well as view (a nice open garden with a lawn and a pond) and
natural light (a lot of daylight and candle) might be some architectural
details which facilitates restoration and, thus, psychosocial supportiveness
in the indoor environment.
The two theoretical approaches resulted in design scenarios and in both
similar environmental components were identified in relation to psychosocial
supportiveness. These common environmental features indicated freedom/control
through the natural and artificial light and openings as well as
safety/security through walls, floor, and ceiling. This duality of experience
of psychosocial supportiveness in the indoor environment is possible to trace
back to the very basic human instincts of survival in terms of escaping and
shelter.
Further exploration of psychosocial supportiveness in design is needed. As a
scenario, the combination of the two theories into a process continuum with
enhanced relations to indoor environmental details might be a clear
application model for design professionals.
ISSN 1402-1544 / ISRN LTU-DT--06/57--SE / NR 2006:57
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