Abstract

Growing ageing population today may be necessitating building design decision makers to reconsider the indoor environmental quality (IEQ) standards in a way that accommodates senior occupants’ diverse and individual needs and demands. An experience design approach to rationalising and individualising end-user experience on how to utilise tangible products may serve to reflect user perceptions. Generally, architectural design practices tend to incorporate neither IEQ monitoring and analysis data, nor environmental experience design today. In response to the need for filling this gap, the authors of this paper conducted a feasibility study previously that led to structuring and defining an ‘Environmental Experience Design’ (EXD) research framework. Based on the previous case study on the collective spatial analysis and IEQ monitoring results, this paper further explored the usability and applicability of this proposed EXD framework particularly to the previously documented aged care facility in Victoria, Australia, which has been stressing active ageing agendas. This EXD framework usability experiment helped to build the capacity for engaging the subjectivity and objectivity of end users’ expectations, desires, and requirements in the architectural design thinking process. Nonetheless, due to the limitation of this initial and fundamental usability study’s resources and the objective, the necessity of adjusting the scale and scope of EXD analyses emerged. Moreover, the universality of this EXD research framework usage under various architectural typologies and user conditions yet require further attempts and investigations.

Highlights

  • The population of Australia is ageing [1,2,3]

  • This study explores this challenge through implementing an ‘Environmental Experience Design’

  • In the Experience Design (EXD) research framework, in response to Function Analysis System Technique (FAST) implementation results, user experience related functions and the associated spatial design strategies and solutions are contextualised through the development of a human-environment matching ‘EXD evaluation matrix’ (Figure 2) [24]

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Summary

Introduction

The population of Australia is ageing [1,2,3]. There were 3.5 million senior citizens who were aged 65 years and over in 2014 taking up 15% of the population [4]. The greatest proportional shift in few decades to be expected is the number of Victorians aged 85 years and above is projected to increase from 2.6% of the population in 2017 to 4.6% in 2051 [9]. As the Australian population ages, the state of Victoria is actively working towards actively working towards facilitating effective spatial design strategies through an integrated facilitating effective spatial design strategies through an integrated framework for “active ageing”. Neither does the environmental design data itself serve as a direct architectural design decision-making tool This study explores this challenge through implementing an ‘Environmental Experience Design’. EXD research framework as a systematic approach to further identifying relevant design solutions towards activating senior citizens for the improvement of their health and wellbeing

Environmental Experience Design Research Framework Review
General
Proposed EXD Framework Implementation
Exterior
Thermal
Design Solutions
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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