posted on 2010-08-13, 10:54authored byYisong Zhao, Monjur Mourshed, Jonathan A. Wright
There has been a significant increase in capital building programmes in the National
Health Service (NHS) since the publication in 2000 of the Government policy on
modernisation of health and care delivery in the UK. With regard to physical capacity,
the target was to create over 100 new hospitals by 2010 and 500 new one-stop
primary care centres. The initiative was seen as a way to modernise the physical
facilities as well as the key health and care delivery activities that take place in and
around them. Space layout design is considered as one of the primordial activities in a
building’s lifecycle and impacts on the ‘human to environment’ and ‘human to
human’ interactions. It is, therefore, essential to understand the factors that influence
the design and outcome of space layouts, in particular in healthcare buildings because
of the complex functional relationships that exist between the activities. A
comprehensive review of the factors related to space layout design in healthcare
facilities have been undertaken in this research. The findings suggest that the
developments in healthcare and allied fields have implications for the design of space
layouts and the resulting buildings and are as important as some of the functional
aspects such as efficiency and productivity. The other notable factors can be attributed
to the need to mitigate the impacts of, as well as adapt to, the global climate change.
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Citation
ZHAO, Y., MOURSHED, M. and WRIGHT, J., 2009. Factors influencing the design of spatial layouts in healthcare buildings. IN: Dainty, A.R.J. (ed) Proceedings of the 25th Annual ARCOM Conference. Nottingham, September 2009. Reading: ARCOM.