The Nature of Choice: Redefining Curative Environments through Natural Connection, Place Identity, and User-Controlled Experience

Celia Armstrong // Adviser: Rena Cumby

The Nature of Choice: Redefining Curative Environments through Natural Connection, Place Identity, and User-Controlled Experience

Clinical healthcare settings now place an emphasis on restorative and healing environments as a desired mode to curative care. This can be achieved through the incorporation of three foundational principles which promote healing within curative environments. The three foundational principles to achieve this include human connection to nature, place identity, and user-controlled experience. To successfully create curative and healing environments that help supplement conventional approaches to medicine, healing, and human well-being, is the direction I have explored in my Interior Design thesis. My thesis aims to define the opportunities behind creating a patient centric and patient controlled environment that promotes holistic approaches to medicine by bridging the gap between conventional medicine and alternative therapies. This investigation seeks to promote a curated and self-guided journey for both the patient and their support teams while carefully considering the treatment paths that each patient experiences. It is my goal to embrace the human connection to nature and the utilization of patient-controlled experiences to create a positive journey to healing.

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Enhancing Health and Well-being through Natural Ventilation

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Installation Art and Live Performance as a Means of Exploring Place History