Abstract

The study aims to provide new insights into the approach to the spatial design of homelike dementia care facilities. This paper builds on Molony's (2010) findings that home meaning in care facilities is a process of people-place integration, and then proposes that people living with dementia can accomplish this process through their bodily habit. This research adopted an ethnographic case study approach. Three cases from a long-term care facility were studied by using semi-structured interviews and observations. According to the findings, having a sense of home for people living with dementia can be understood as a process of re-establishing people-place integration through their bodily habits in a long-term care facility. As a result, designers can consider which design features can assist people living with dementia in re-establishing this integration through bodily habit to create home feelings in a dementia care facility.

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