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Designing dying well: toward a new architectural approach of in-patient palliative care environments for the terminally ill

Bellamy, Anne 2018. Designing dying well: toward a new architectural approach of in-patient palliative care environments for the terminally ill. Presented at: 2018 Marie Curie Palliative Care Research Conference, jointly with the Palliative Care Section of the Royal Society of Medicine, Royal Society of Medicine, London, 17th October 2018. Published in: Bellamy, Anne ed. BMJ Palliative and Supportive Care. , vol.8 London: BMJ Palliative and Supportive Care, p. 361. 10.1136/bmjspcare-2018-mariecurie.4

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Abstract

Neither a ‘hospital’ nor a ‘home’; the in-patient hospice has a unique architectural identity remaining largely undocumented. There is a plethora of architectural research regarding more common-place healthcare buildings such as hospitals and care-homes. (RIBA, n.d) However the architecture of in-patient hospices is misunderstood in the role it can play in supporting the holistic principles of palliative care, as backdrops for “not just a good death, but a good life to the very end” (Gawande, 2014, pg 245) Reconciling the social and spatial, this research aims to establish an authentic identity for in-patient hospices; developing opportunities and situations for environments that become “sympathetic extensions of our sense of ourselves” (Bloomer, KC + Moore, CW, 1977, pg 78) enabling those at the end of their life to dwell with dignity. An ethnographic study involving practice led design research; the research engages with experiences of the researcher and users of Welsh in-patient hospices, alongside interrogations of existing architectural strategies. This inter-disciplinary methodology will provide a ‘back and forth’ movement to reflect with the community of practice upon design projects and fieldwork. Foundation work concluded that ‘homely’ is a too broad and subjective concept with which to define meaningful architectural responses for the variety of users and uses of in-patient hospices. Building upon this, initial visits to Welsh in-patient hospices and design primers of key moments of inhabitation aims to provide conclusions on how architecture can create and balance the individual phenomenological experiences and needs of patients, family, and staff.

Item Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Lecture)
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Architecture
Subjects: N Fine Arts > NA Architecture
Publisher: BMJ Palliative and Supportive Care
Funders: N/A
Last Modified: 21 Feb 2020 13:45
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/127511

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