Design Philosophy

I believe that Design is an international language. People can catch the point without having artistic background. I love drawing and painting when I was five years old. When I grew up, I like to create something new especially in 3-dimentional space and decorate my own room. I keep working on painting and designing since they are my favorite things in the world and I feel that design can express myself and release pressure.

To me, design is the technique to change and improve the world and to create a better future. The thing that inspire me to major in interior design is that I like to create useful stuffs and think much about the functions of a space. I believe becoming a interior designer, I will be given the ability to design the interior of spaces as well as small handy supplies. My goal is to become a professional interior designer who makes people live in a more comfortable and convenient environment. Also, I would like to design the interiors for my mom and it counts as part of my dreamed future.

Saturday, July 23, 2016

Dementia-Friendly Environment- Circulation

Today I want to talk about the features I found from several journal articles that could possibly contribute to a dementia-friendly environment. I notice self-orientation is one of the biggest challenge for people with dementia so I look into floor plan configurations and try to find out if there is certain circulation that could assist way-finding.

Here are four circulation types the scholar researched on.


Some general findings include avoiding long corridors and making visual differences for various functional spaces to assist wayfinding ability and spatial orientation. Another research group focuses on floor plan and circulation design and discovers that L-shaped building seem to result in the best wayfinding performance. They also explores that residences live in corridor-like design reported gradually decrease in various ability. Some scholars suggest allowing a good amount of clear visual access so that the space will be easier for residences to navigate. It seems like the major design considerations include:
1. Create anchor point (point of reference) by utilizing visually and functionally significant design for spaces with different function.
2. Simple circulation with minimum turning points but avoid long corridors.
3. Maximize visual access so that residences will be able to identify where they are, where to go, and even recall where they intend to go.

Here is the findings on floor play layouts! Please stay tuned for more discoveries.  


No comments:

Post a Comment