A Home at the End of Life: Designing for End of Life Care

Bridget Maguire // Adviser: Rachel Schade

A Home at the End of Life: Designing for End of Life Care

Modern hospice care design is currently made up of four building typologies, including a wing within a hospital, a building connected to a hospital, an independent facility, and at home care. These current typology designs are deficient in the care of both their patients and their patients’ families and caregivers. There is a current culture of silence around death that can be read in these typologies and instead of making people feel at home, they produce undue stress, anxiety, and isolation. My thesis project challenges the current hospice care building environments by using architecture and design to improve end of life care experiences. My design will seek to enable and allow patients to live their life to the fullest through the engagement of the senses, creating a sense of home and community, and creating spaces that metaphorically and physically assist and guide patients and their families through this final journey.

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An Idyllic Reclusion: Wellness Retreat for Anxiety Relief and Spiritual Healing

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Biophilic Design: The Philosophy, Science, and Application of Inducing a Biophilic Effect in Built Environments