Frozen Music or Form & Function - Asethetics, Design & Dementia

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Medical & Health Humanities Seminar


“I call Architecture Frozen Music� Goethe and/or Friedrich Schelling


“[I am] convinced of the truth of Pythagoras' saying, that Nature is sure to act consistently . . . I conclude that the same numbers by means of which the agreement of sounds affect our ears with delight” Alberti 1452 “…proportions which we feel to be harmonious because they arouse, deep within us and beyond our senses, a resonance, a sort of sounding-board which begins to vibrate Le Corbusier 1923 As abstract art forms based on rhythm, proportion and harmony, architecture and music share a clear cultural lineage” Charles Jencks 2013


When designing for older people, or people with a cognitive impairment, how important are things like harmony, resonance, rhythm, balance or modulation?


â€œâ€Śform ever follows function

Goethe and/or Friedrich Schelling


“Whether it be the sweeping eagle in his flight, or the open apple-blossom, the toiling workhorse‌form ever follows function. It is the pervading law of all things organic and inorganic, of all things physical and metaphysical, of all things human and all things superhuman, of all true manifestations of the head, of the heart, of the soul, that the life is recognizable in its expression, that form ever follows function. Louis Sullivan 1896


firmitas

(strength)

utilitas

(functionality)

venustas (beauty)

Vitruvius circa. 50BC


Basic Functions • The Accommodation of Activities • Shelter & Salubrious Environments • Physical & Psychological Safety & Security • Financial Security, & Profit • Identity & Community • Identity, Individualism, & the Unique • Buildings as Signs & Status Symbols

Advanced Functions • The Cognitive Function of Architecture • Experiential Aesthetics & Intellectual Aesthetics Lang and Moleski 2010


When designing for people with complex physical, sensory & cognitive needs, how important is a multilayered approach that helps a building function as planned?


Designing for People with Dementia




How the built environment impacts us


Universal Design Approach All of us

Buildings


Person with Dementia

Hospital


Key Design Goals Design should:


•support connections & engagement with family & local community •compensate for physical, sensory & cognitive disability •reinforce familiarity •reinforce personal identity .


•support meaningful activity •be orientating and easy to understand •control sensory stimuli •promote independence, autonomy & choice •culturally appropriate & respect local context.


Key Design Considerations


Integration with community for access to services, independence and social interaction


Accessible & usable environment to support disability & normal effects of aging


Calm and easy to interpret environment


Soften the institutional environment

Facilitate personalisation to support continuity of self

Use familiar and recognisable design

Providing a people-friendly environment


Provide a safe environment Support diet, nutrition & hydration

Support meaningful activities

Support safety, health & wellbeing


Promote & support meaningful activities


Optimise positive sensory stimulation while minimising negative stimulation

Balance Sensory Stimulation

Contact with nature & access to outdoor spaces


Positive sensory stimuli – Especially pleasant environmental conditions (e.g. wildlife activity, daylight, birdsong, summer breezes)


Minimal negative sensory stimuli – Especially noise and glare


Way-finding to support navigation

Good visibility and visual access

Support orientation & spatial cognition

Support Orientation & Navigation


Good visual access – Such as low window sill height to allow views to garden


Single rooms with space for belongings and for visitors.

space to support a person with dementia & accompanying person


Space for retreat or conversely communal activities

space and supports for physical movement

space to support a person with dementia & accompanying person


safety & security Patient admission

care delivery

therapy

space a physica

Appropriate & ethical use of technology


Safe accessible outdoor spaces visible from the interior to encourage occupants to use safe garden spaces


Change of scene Biophilic Design & Exposure to nature – Health and wellbeing benefits Outdoor activities as therapy Outdoor space as ‘restorative’ environments in terms of attentional capacity Outdoor activities as physical exercise Exposure to natural light Space to Socialise Spiritual Wellbeing


When designing for older people, or people with a cognitive impairment, how important are things like harmony, resonance, rhythm, balance or modulation?


When designing for people with complex physical, sensory & cognitive needs, how important is a multilayered approach that helps a building function as planned?


Performance based Architecture


…technological and aesthetic styles of thought reduce architecture to our concepts of it. Other and essential aspects of buildings come into view if one supposes that the actuality of the building consists largely in its acts, its performances….

.. .uncritical reaffirmation of old-style functionalist thinking — a kind of thinking that is both reductive and inadequate because it recognizes only what it can predict Kolarevic & Malkawi 2005


“When the building is understood as the locus of performances (not functional solutions), it can be seen as both a preparation and a response; an ensemble of conditions that not only anticipates occurrences but reacts to them, by virtue of foresight in the first case and participation in the second.�Leatherbarrow 2013


Performance based design that creates well-tempered environments that are tuned and retuned to the needs of people living with dementia


Thank you tom.grey@tcd.ie


Disorders in Mediaeval Handwriting

Speaker: Dr Deborah Thorpe

Visiting Mari Sklodowska-Curie Fellow, Trinity Long Room Hub

Discussant: Prof Brendan Kelly Dept of Psychiatry, TCD

Neill Theatre Trinity Long Room Hub

Interactive Broadcast to Clinical Sites

13:00 – 14:00 Thursday 9th November 2017

London, British Library, MS Royal 14 E III, folio 6V

Medical and Health Humanities Seminar

Tremulous Hands: Tracing Diseases and


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