Hyde syte tactics harland5/21/2023 Seen here are Tara Sydney and Justine Anderson talking about DA processes. Student Work: Charlotte Huang Architecture, Design and Planning - University of Sydneyīring on semester one! We’ve been busy at the University of Sydney, furiously filming a fabulous line up of 40 mini-lectures for our fourth year Professional Practice course. Very proud to connect my client with a leading wellbeing researcher Rebecca McLaughlan, help to create some original published research and then teach a masters design studio. It helped me to clarify my thinking, get creative and be inspired by so many dedicated students who really engaged with the topic. I really loved the joy and sense of achievement teaching provided me. CHROFI were also there lending their design eye to the crits. The semester included some fantastic guest lecturers including Philippa Chandler (Melbourne University) talking about connecting with community and Jo Caughtry talking biophilic design. At each presentation we had CEO Graeme Philpotts and his amazing team providing real world insights and feedback. We had 40 students create a hypothetical masterplan and design their own approach for wellbeing at this important children’s charity. Such a fun semester focused on design for wellbeing at Stewart House in Curl Curl. #design #innovation #palliativecare #collaborationįinally created a digital student book of our 2022 Sydney University Master’s design studio taught with Rebecca McLaughlan! Our findings point to the value of broad consultation and collaboration throughout the design process in achieving design solutions that go beyond standard practice for the benefit of patients, families, and staff.įollow the link below or message me for a copy: These real-world examples illustrate that moving beyond established design practice to improve patient, family and staff experiences, is possible, albeit within myriad constraints that resist innovation. The article draws on data from an international precedent study of 30 contemporary facilities and 24 interviews with architects, palliative care physicians and medical administrators, in Australia, the US, and the UK. Within this article, Emma Kirby (UNSW) and I discuss innovative architectural solutions for balancing privacy WITH social connection, managing the risks of using “comfortable” materials within hospital settings, and ways to shake off the traditions of hospital design. The first of our articles from the 3-year DECRA project on Designing for Palliative Care has hit the press!
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