Azerocare Plus stone treatment by Antolini

Azerocare Plus stone treatment by Antolini

Dezeen Showroom: Italian stone company Antolini has introduced the Azerocare Plus treatment, designed to allow its surfaces to escape common sources of damage in kitchens and bathrooms.

A patented process exclusive to Antolini, Azerocare Plus protects natural stone from the staining or corrosion that can be caused through contact with oil-based or acidic substances such as lemon, coffee or wine.

Azerocare Plus stone treatment by Antolini
Azerocare Plus protects stone from damage from acidic and oil-based substances

In so doing, it enhances the visual power of these stones, enabling them to play the starring role in kitchen and bathroom settings for the length of their life.

“Kitchens and bathrooms, traditionally considered service environments, have experienced a real revolution over time, becoming the protagonists of the design attention of architects and designers,” said Antolini.

Azerocare Plus stone treatment by Antolini
It is designed for use in kitchens and bathrooms

“The first, a place par excellence of conviviality and sharing, has managed to integrate more and more with the other living spaces, eliminating any traditional architectural barrier; the second, from a necessary place, has transformed into a temple of domestic wellbeing, where personal care and tranquility are the masters,” the brand continued.

Azerocare Plus offers permanent protection and is available on Antolini’s marble, onyx and soft quartzite stones with Matt, Lether or Lux finishes, as well as travertine with a Matt finish.


Product details:

Product: Azerocare Plus
Brand: Antolini
Contact: info@antolini.com

Dezeen Showroom

Dezeen Showroom offers an affordable space for brands to launch new products and showcase their designers and projects to Dezeen’s huge global audience. For more details email showroom@dezeen.com.

Dezeen Showroom is an example of partnership content on Dezeen. Find out more about partnership content here.

The post Azerocare Plus stone treatment by Antolini appeared first on Dezeen.

Modular office chair concept lets you define your own sense of comfort

Given how many hours a day and how many days a week people work in front of their desks, the need for comfortable and ergonomic chairs is more important today than ever. Although work-from-home arrangements have made it possible to pick your own chair, that isn’t true for offices that buy generic chairs in bulk to keep costs down. While almost all manufacturers promise comfort, not everyone defines that word the same way.

A chair with an ergonomic yet cost-effective design would be great, but it would be even better if people could customize it to their own comfort without breaking the bank. That’s the kind of office chair heaven that this concept tries to envision, and unsurprisingly, it uses a modular design to solve that kind of problem.

Designer: Byeongjun Kang

1

To some extent, the typical computer chair with four to five wheels and height-adjustable backrests already has the foundations of modularity. They’re often flat-packed and require some assembly, so it’s just one step away from adjusting that design to accommodate other parts. You just need the right connections to use.

1

FP, or “First-Party,” Chair concept design uses a rail system to make that not only possible but also easy. The seat and the backrest are the main modular parts that can be removed and replaced by any compatible design. It starts out with completely flat designs, but these can be swapped out for ones with cushions, curves, and armrests. Anything that can fit that rail system will do as long as it keeps the chair balanced.

The base is also replaceable, though the options are probably fewer. You have the typical caster for movability or a flat platform for stability. The latter can probably be screwed down as well, which might be necessary for some mass installation. There isn’t much wiggle room for differentiation here, especially since the need for stability is even greater.

The FP Chair doesn’t differ from those mass-produced office chairs in terms of packaging convenience or assembling complexity. There are also still some limits to what modular designs can be used, such as the balance of the chair and its stability. As with any modular system, it will also depend on just how many third-party designs take advantage of this feature, though given the need for personalization and customization, one can easily imagine how big that market could be.

The post Modular office chair concept lets you define your own sense of comfort first appeared on Yanko Design.

Michael Henriksen uses exposed clay-block walls to extend own home in St Albans

St Albans extension by Michael Henriksen

Architect Michael Henriksen used exposed clay block walls, timber ceilings and cork flooring to bring a sense of “warmth and texture” to the renovation and extension of his own family home in St Albans, England.

Henriksen, who is a director at London studio Coffey Architects, undertook the redesign of the 1920s, three-bedroom pebble-dashed house as a “nights and weekends passion project”.

Exterior of St Albans extension by Michael Henriksen
Michael Henriksen has completed an extension of his home in St Albans

The renovation added two additional bedrooms and opened-up the ground floor to house a living, kitchen and dining space with an extension made using clay blocks, in what Henriksen claims is a UK first.

As well as simplifying the construction process due to their inherent insulation properties, these blocks were left exposed to form a textured feature wall in the open-plan kitchen and living area.

Terrace of St Albans extension by Michael Henriksen
The extension houses a living, kitchen and dining space

“I had previously seen clay blocks used in projects back in Denmark where I’m from, as well as in some exceptional projects from Spain,” Henriksen told Dezeen.

“Initially, I considered using typical cavity walls, but I realised that monolithic clay blocks could simplify the construction process and potentially reduce labour costs, as these blocks form the entire wall structure, requiring only a thin external render,” he added.

Kitchen of St Albans extension by Michael Henriksen
The walls of the extension were made using clay blocks

Overlooking the garden through full-height windows and a sliding glass door, the exposed clay block walls of the extension are complemented by cork floor and a ceiling of exposed timber, with a series of skylights that illuminate smooth concrete and ribbed timber countertops.

This open space is visible as soon as the home is entered, with a new axis framed by the corridor and staircase, where a timber balustrade extends the full length and width of the wall to conceal doors to utility and bathroom spaces.

“A ceiling canopy of birch plywood and glued-laminated timber beams, paired with cork flooring tiles, brings warmth and texture to the open plan living area,” said Henriksen.

“The added ceiling height enhances the area’s spacious, open feel, often leaving a striking first impression on friends as they enter the house,” he continued.

“We used simple butt joints at the joinery corners rather than more complex options like mitre joints, which helped keep the process both efficient and satisfying.”

Ceiling of St Albans extension by Michael Henriksen
The cork floor complements the exposed timber ceiling

On the first floor, a side extension above the home’s garage created space for two additional bedrooms, while a loft conversion added a further guest bedroom and reading den that can be accessed from the children’s bunk beds.

While more pared-back in their material palette, these bedroom spaces continue the use of exposed plywood in beds and “crisp” window reveals.

Timber balustrade of St Albans extension by Michael Henriksen
A timber balustrade conceals the utility and bathroom doors

With London studio Coffey Architects, Henriksen has worked on projects including a home in Dorset that was designed to mimic a cluster of timber-clad agricultural barns.

The photography is by James Retief.

The post Michael Henriksen uses exposed clay-block walls to extend own home in St Albans appeared first on Dezeen.

3D LED Dinosaur Lamp

This easy to assemble cardboard 3D dinosaur lamp features an LED bulb and USB plug for a zero maintenance experience. Also available in a llama version.

Tenon kitchen by Kristian Ahlmark for Kongacph

Tenon kitchen by Kristian Ahlmark for Kongacph

Dezeen Showroom: Danish architect Kristian Ahlmark has designed a kitchen unit for Lithuanian brand Kongacph that is made from a single oak log crafted to highlight the material’s natural beauty.

The Tenon kitchen is defined by its tenon-mortise joinery, adopting the traditional carpentry technique to create a clean, modern design, which Ahlmark has also integrated into his own home.

Kitchen unit by Kongacph
Kristian Ahlmark has designed the Tenon kitchen

Instead of varnishes or lacquers, Tenon is finished with natural oils to enrich the grain and texture of the wood while embracing occasional cracks.

“These imperfections become defining characteristics, creating a kitchen with a unique personality and warmth,” Kongacph said.

Oak cupboards from Tenon kitchen by Kristian Ahlmark
Each kitchen is crafted from one single oak log

The sturdy, timeless kitchen was designed to “last for generations”, with a focus on functionality as well as beauty.

With this aim, Kongacph created bespoke drawer insets that can be tailored to store utensils, spices, cookware or other paraphernalia, depending on the organisational needs of the user.


Product details:

Product: Tenon kitchen
Designer: Kristian Ahlmark
Brand: Kongacph
Contact: goda@kongacph.com

Material: solid oak wood
Colours/finishes: oiled

Dezeen Showroom

Dezeen Showroom offers an affordable space for brands to launch new products and showcase their designers and projects to Dezeen’s huge global audience. For more details email showroom@dezeen.com.

Dezeen Showroom is an example of partnership content on Dezeen. Find out more about partnership content here.

The post Tenon kitchen by Kristian Ahlmark for Kongacph appeared first on Dezeen.

David Thulstrup adds oak and slate restaurant to RHSP's Macallan Distillery

Danish designer David Thulstrup has completed the TimeSpirit restaurant inside RSHP’s Macallan distillery building in Scotland.

Named TimeSpirit, the 24-seat restaurant was created to celebrate The Macallan‘s 200th year anniversary and is the latest addition to their distillery completed in 2018 by British architecture studio RSHP.

TimeSpirit restaurant
Local and natural materials feature throughout TimeSpirit restaurant

The space, centred around an open kitchen, consists of two dining areas – an oval wine cellar and a private dining room – overlooking the hills of the Speyside estate.

Local and natural materials feature throughout the space, forging a connection to the surrounding Scottish landscape, the whisky manufacturing process and the restaurant’s Spanish cuisine by El Celler de Can Roca.

Oak dining booth at the TimeSpirit restaurant
David Thulstrup designed oak dining booths to create to “create a sense of focus”

“My goal was to create a timeless design which honours the place and reflected their collaboration with El Celler de Can Roca,” Thulstrup told Dezeen.

Oak was used to create bespoke dining booths and waiter stations inspired by sherry-seasoned whisky casks, which will develop a patina over time.

Restaurant at The Macallan's distillery in Speyside
The restaurant is located within The Macallan’s distillery in Speyside, Scotland

“The oak dining booths were designed to create a sense of focus and comfort to the table, we felt it was important to have these spaces where you can be immersed into the experience,” said Thulstrup.

Slate, a traditional Scottish building material, features in the open kitchen and Albarez stone from Jerez clads the curved walls of the wine cellar, connecting to The Macallan’s whisky-cask suppliers based in Jerez, southern Spain.

Curved wine cellar in Scottish restaurant
The curved wine cellar features oak and Spanish Albarez stone

“I believe a lot of value lies in local and natural materials,” said Thulstrup.  “Local materials connect to the place, while natural materials reveal age, and personally I think, feels more luxurious

“They are also more honest, and I think that is something we need more of today,” he continued.

David Thulstrup's Thulstrup's ARV dining chair in TimeSpirit restaurant
TimeSpirit was opened to celebrate The Macallan’s 200th year anniversary

Tables and chairs from Thulstrup’s ARV furniture collection feature throughout the space, originally designed for the Noma restaurant in Copenhagen.

“The furnishings were selected for both their beauty and durability, ensuring that the restaurant’s timeless design will last for decades,” said Thulstrup.

David Thulstrup adds TimeSpirit restaurant to RHSP's Macallan Distillery
Hanging mesh panels feature throughout the space

Hanging aluminium mesh panels enclose and divide the dining space improving the acoustic quality of the room and providing privacy.

“The panels were designed with both functionality and aesthetics in mind, allowing for views into the distillery while subtly creating intimate sections within the open layout,” said Thulstrup.

Other projects featured on Dezeen by Thulstrup include a 19th-century Copenhagen warehouse and Ikoyi restaurant in London.

Photography by Robert Rieger.

The post David Thulstrup adds oak and slate restaurant to RHSP’s Macallan Distillery appeared first on Dezeen.

Luxury hotel set to be built on Nakagin Capsule Tower site

Pullman Tokyo Ginza

The site of the metabolist Nakagin Capsule Tower, which was disassembled in Tokyo‘s Ginza district in 2022, is set to be taken over by a luxury hotel led by hospitality brand Accor.

Accor has revealed it will open the Pullman Tokyo Ginza hotel on the site of the iconic Japanese housing block in late 2027.

It follows the controversial dismantling of the Nakagin Capsule Tower due to the dilapidation of its structure, which was completed in 1972 to a design by architect Kisho Kurokawa.

Site in “one of Asia’s most sought-after” destinations

Nakagin Capsule Tower was composed of two interconnected concrete towers, onto which 140 prefabricated steel capsules were bolted. These pods contained compact homes.

Kurokawa’s ambition was for these tiny homes to be swapped out and replaced every 25 years but a lack of funding meant this was never realised, leading to their deterioration.

Video footage shot by Dezeen in April 2022 captured the dismantling of the structure finally taking place, following years of protests, fundraisers and petitions aimed at saving it.

Accor has said it obtained its site for the Pullman Tokyo Ginza because it is “one of Asia’s most sought-after shopping and lifestyle districts”. Its architect has not yet been disclosed.

Pullman Tokyo Ginza
The site of the Nakagin Capsule Tower will become home to Pullman Tokyo Ginza. Photo courtesy of Accor

“Pullman Tokyo Ginza will serve as a prime destination for both domestic and international guests,” said Accord.

Few details about the hotel have been revealed, but in the render that has been published, it can be seen with a boxy form with deep-set windows and a glazed double-height lobby.

It will contain 145 bedrooms alongside amenities including a restaurant, bar and gym.

“This hotel is designed to cater to the needs of the modern leisure traveller, offering flexible and innovative meeting, events, and business spaces that seamlessly blend productive workspaces with vibrant social areas,” said Accor.

“I guess it would be difficult to include a capsule”

In response to the news, a spokesperson for the Nakagin Capsule Tower Building Preservation and Regeneration Project said it hopes the new building will pay homage to Kurokawa’s structure.

“I would be happy if the hotel had photos or objects of the Nakagin Capsule Tower in the interior,” they wrote on X. “I guess it would be difficult to include a capsule.”

While the tower has been demolished, many of the individual capsules have been preserved. Among them is the pod numbered A606, which is being converted into a “mobile capsule”.

The group leading this, named Nakagin Capsule Tower A606 Project, told Dezeen that the ambition is to honour “Kurokawa’s concept of ‘architecture in motion'” and adaptability.

Adaptability was a key focus of metabolism, an architecture movement founded in Japan between the late 1950s and early 1960s. Nakagin Capsule Tower was one of few the remaining buildings from the era.

Each of the Nakagin Capsule Tower capsules was animated by a round window and measures 2.5 metres by four metres and contained built-in living spaces and furniture.

Kurokawa designed them to attract single businessmen looking for a compact home in a central and convenient location.

Though the original tower has been demolished, it could be replicated in both real space and the metaverse, as its original architect Kisho Kurokawa’s studio is auctioning the rights to rebuild it.

Japanese digital consultancy Gluon is also attempting to recreate the Nakagin Capsule Tower in digital space, using data collected from 20,000 photographs to create an augmented-reality model.

The main photo is courtesy of the Nakagin Capsule Tower A606 Project. 

The post Luxury hotel set to be built on Nakagin Capsule Tower site appeared first on Dezeen.

The top 10 UK architecture projects of 2024

Farmer's Arms Cold Food Store by Hayatsu Architects

Scooped facades, innovative material use and ​community-centric housing define this list of the 10 most memorable UK architecture projects published on Dezeen in 2024.


The Scoop office building by Corstorphine & Wright
Photo by Daniel Shearing

The Scoop, London, by Corstorphine & Wright

Aptly named The Scoop, this office building in London is animated by the giant gouge in its front elevation, formed from a cluster of bricks that were individually computer-modelled.

While it may initially appear an attempt to draw attention to the building, Corstorphine & Wright’s goal was actually to retain focus on the circular window of the Grade II-listed church next door.

Find out more about The Scoop ›


Farmer's Arms Cold Food Store by Hayatsu Architects
Photo courtesy of Hayatsu Architects

The Farmer’s Arms Cold Food Store, Lake District, by Hayatsu Architects

Intricate motifs formed from Japanese Shikkui-style plaster animate the walls of this cold food store in the Lake District, designed for a pub run by the Grizedale Arts institution.

Rather than using traditional Shikkui – which is formed of hydrated lime, hemp fibre and seaweed – the plaster was created using a mixture of sand, lime and seaweed from the British coast, and pigmented with iron oxide for a subtle pink hue.

Behind the plaster is a larch frame filled with wood fibre insulation, which balances on boulders sourced from a nearby quarry and is crowned with a corrugated roof dotted with iron slag.

Find out more about The Farmer’s Arms Cold Food Store ›


Brighton College performing arts centre by Krft
Photo by Stijn Bollaert

Brighton College arts centre, Brighton, by Krft

Krft is another studio that broke the mould when it came to facade design this year. At Brighton College, the studio created an arts centre with brick- and flint-clad elevations that scoop and bulge to mirror the layout of the spaces inside.

According to the studio, this sculptural form also “refers to a dancing movement”, nodding to the building’s use as the school‘s home for performing arts.

Find out more about the Brighton College arts centre ›


Barneys Ruins by Patrick Bradley
Photo by Joe Laverty Photography

Barneys Ruins, Mid Ulster, by Patrick Bradley Architects

Over in Northern Ireland, Patrick Bradley Architects married the moss-covered ruins of an old farm cottage with a cantilevered shipping container to create this home.

The unlikely pairing gives rise to a characterful dwelling that celebrates material reuse and, according to the studio, “serves as a storyteller, bridging the past and present into a cohesive narrative”.

Find out more about Barneys Ruins ›


The Clearing in Bexley by WonKy
Photo by Jim Stephenson

The Clearing, London, by WonKy

Another project on the list incorporating a shipping container is The Clearing – an “all-weather” education centre hidden away in Lesnes Abbey Woods by WonKy.

The container was used as part of a wider strategy to use as many reclaimed materials as possible, allowing the studio to make the most of the client’s budget while minimising the project’s carbon footprint. This also led it to repurpose an old military parachute as a shelter.

“We pride ourselves on being resourceful and making the most of a client’s budget, and are always looking at ways of re-use and recycling,” WonKy co-founder Lefkos Kyriacou told Dezeen.

Find out more about The Clearing ›


The Natural History Museum gardens by Feilden Fowles and J&L GIbbons
Photo by Kendal Noctor

Natural History Museum gardens, London, by Feilden Fowles

A pair of timber-framed, stone-wrapped buildings anchor the verdant landscape outside the Natural History Museum, which was revamped by Feilden Fowles this year.

The overhaul was carried out to improve the accessibility and biodiversity of the urban garden while ensuring any upgrades were subordinate to the architecture of the landmark Grade I-listed museum.

Find out more about the Natural History Museum gardens ›


Caochan na Creige stone house in Scotland by Izat Arundell
Photo by Richard Gaston

Caochan na Creige, Outer Hebrides, by Izat Arundell

Scottish stone forms a shield around Caochan na Creige, a small angled home on an exposed site in Scotland’s Outer Hebrides.

The inconspicuous dwelling was designed by Izat Arundell to “sit respectfully in the landscape”, with a plan that encourages occupants to follow the sun throughout the day. Its cool-toned exterior opens into a contrastingly warm interior of wooden panelling and joinery.

Find out more about Caochan na Creige ›


Cobham Bowers, Surrey, by Coffey Architects
Photo by Phil Coffey

Cobham Bowers, Surrey, by Coffey Architects

A low-lying communal pavilion and flint-walled central garden form the centrepiece of Cobham Bowers, a later-living housing community in Surrey designed by Coffey Architects.

Arranged around the garden are a series of brick-clad residential structures, containing 53 apartments grouped in clusters of four served by localised private lobbies.

“The design and layout is focused on engendering a sense of community and neighbourliness and maximising the opportunity for residents to get outside,” director Lee Marsden told Dezeen.

Find out more about Cobham Bowers ›


Gardenhide Studio by Commonbond Architects
Photo by James Retrief

Gardenhide Studio, London, by Commonbond Architects

The smallest project on the list is Gardenhide Studio, the self-designed office of Commonbond Architects in London built with a tactile combination of hempcrete, timber and reclaimed materials.

Inside, the floor of the studio is dropped a metre below the outside ground level, placing the flowerbed in line with the top of the desk and bringing occupants “eye to eye with visiting animals in the garden”.

Find out more about Gardenhide Studio ›


Exterior of Harriet Hardy House
Photo by Tim Crocker

Harriet Hardy House, London, by Mae Architects

Another residential project on the list is Harriet Hardy House, a block of 119 social homes in London animated by arched detailing, textured brickwork and deep-set balconies.

It was designed by Mae Architects as a “21st-century almshouse” and features 54 extra care flats – a form of specialist housing for older residents – alongside a generous communal garden to provide residents with ample space to meet and gather.

Find out more about Harriet Hardy House ›

The post The top 10 UK architecture projects of 2024 appeared first on Dezeen.

Aalto University immortalises early mobile tech with Nokia Design Archive

Nokia Design Archive by Aalto University

Designs from the early years of mobile phone technology will be brought to the fore in the Nokia Design Archive, an online portal being launched by Finland’s Aalto University.

The Nokia Design Archive will bring together more than 700 documents relating to well-recognised models and unseen prototypes from the Nokia brand, including ideation sketches, presentations, advertising and interviews with designers.

Curated by a research team from Aalto University, the archive will draw from some 20,000 items that were licensed from Microsoft Mobile, the subsidiary established in 2014 after Microsoft’s acquisition of Nokia.

The Nokia Design Archive includes designs such as the 7600 “Mango phone”. Photo by Aleski Poutanen

Some of the designs covered in the portal include the 3310 “brick phone”, which was ubiquitous in the early 2000s, and the 8110 “banana phone”, named for its curved design.

There is also the 7600 “mango phone”, an oddity from 2003 that appeared to cross a phone handset with a gaming controller.

Aalto University said the portal, which spans the mid-1990s to 2017, explores the role that Nokia’s designers and decision-makers played in building the technology that is so deeply embedded in our lives today.

Sketches and notes for a clamshell phone by Dale Frye from 1996 from the Nokia Design Archive, Aalto University Archives
Sketches and presentations are among the documents in the collection

Nokia was previously Finland’s largest company, and according to the researchers, the first seeds of social media, augmented reality, QR codes and wearable health technology can all be seen in its archive.

“Nokia was in a similar position in the ’90s as Samsung or Apple are today,” said post-doctoral researcher Kaisu Savola. “These large corporations shape our lives with their products.”

“Technology doesn’t just shape us; we shape technology. When we started the project, the focus was on objects. As we began going through the material, we soon realised that it was about people.”

The research team that curated the portal was made up of designers, design historians, and organisation and management scholars.

Lead researcher Anna Valtonen described sorting through a “van full” of items that were unarchived and in disarray to create the portal.

“I was teetering between joy and despair because there was such an overwhelming amount of work,” she said. “The material shows how important it is to have an organisational culture where it’s okay to try things out and enjoy the process.”

“Especially in these times of change, it is important to understand how we can grasp the world around us and imagine what we could be.”

Render of virtual reality glasses
There are also renders for concepts such as these virtual reality glasses

She said that in Finland, they had a tradition of being open with big data sets but that the stories behind those figures were often missed.

“The focus is often on numerical, empirical stuff, but what about people?,” said Valtonen. “What about how humans perceive things? How ideas are adopted into society? From a scientific perspective, this is the kind of qualitative empirical material we need more of.”

The Nokia Design Archive will be globally accessible from 15 January 2025 on the Aalto University website.

The broader uncurated repository can be visited in person by appointment at the Aalto University Archives in Greater Helsinki.

Several of Nokia’s phones were featured in a Dezeen round-up of iconic mobile phones of the past, which included personal reflections from the team on the handsets they had once loved.

The post Aalto University immortalises early mobile tech with Nokia Design Archive appeared first on Dezeen.

"Many of our everyday spaces are doing us harm"

Harsh hallway lighting

The emerging field of neuroarchitecture raises important new ethical questions for architects, write Cleo Valentine and Heather Mitcheltree.


Several weeks ago we were contacted by someone who had recently moved into a multi-award-winning apartment. It has featured in a range of publications, and has been praised as leading the way in sustainable and ethical housing design. The person who contacted us was miserable.

Neurodivergent, and particularly sensitive to environmental stimuli, he explained that despite prior assurances by the architect that the apartment would meet his particular sensory needs, it doesn’t. He isn’t sleeping, his anxiety levels have risen. And now, he is selling up and moving out.

Elements like natural light, spatial layout and visual complexity don’t just impact on aesthetic sensibilities

He isn’t the only one. We have had a large number of people reach out to tell us their stories about how the spaces they inhabit are having a profound negative impact on their wellbeing.

And while for those with heightened sensitivity to environmental stimuli these experiences are particularly pronounced, the design of the built environment impacts on everyone. Yes, many of our everyday spaces are doing us harm.

Before you shout that we are being melodramatic, let’s unpack this a bit. Architects have always designed spaces with people in mind – balancing functionality, aesthetic design considerations, occupant needs and a range of other concerns.

The emergence of neuroarchitecture – which studies how the built environment affects brain function – deepens our understanding of how design influences occupant health and wellbeing. Evidence shows that elements like natural light, spatial layout and visual complexity don’t just impact on aesthetic sensibilities, they affect how we function, think, and impact on our physical and psychological wellbeing.

But how much of this research is getting through to the design community? In a design review we attended recently at an Australasian university, the lack of industry knowledge about the physiological impact of the built environment on occupants was emphasised with startling clarity.

A very polished rendering of a small, ultra-minimalist room with neon lighting, exposed concrete and services, low ceilings, poor natural lighting, no outlook and a single plastic garden chair in the centre of the room was being praised for its design skill. This was supposedly the future of affordable housing – insert horror face.

Neuroarchitecture is more than a new design trend

Concerns were raised about the potential impact of the design on occupant wellbeing. These comments were dismissed with the reply: “I don’t think we can say that spaces can cause depression.”

For much of the audience in the room, this design ticked the right boxes. The aesthetic du jour was apparently heroin-chic architecture with a side order of Gulag revival.

Design has a long way to go in terms of recognising and putting into practice the neurophysiological impacts of design decisions on health and wellbeing. As an industry, what we praise, publish and give awards to matters.

Neuroarchitecture is more than a new design trend or emerging research field. It is about understanding the broader public-health impact of the spaces that we create.

The challenge is integrating the research insights into real-world practice. To fully leverage this knowledge, it needs to be embedded within the complexities of architectural education, projects and practices.

This is not just an ideological soapbox, or do-gooder utopian vision. Designers have an ethical responsibility to create spaces that do not harm occupants.

There is a resultant ethical duty to minimise the negative effects that result from the design of the built environment

Professional codes emphasise architects’ responsibility to “do no harm”. And while these codes traditionally focus on structural integrity and safety, with the ever-increasing insights from neuroarchitecture, the concept of harm expands.

Design choices such as daylight use, spatial proportions, materiality and visual patterns directly affect psychological comfort, stress levels and health. For example, natural light alters circadian rhythms, impacting on sleep and wellbeing, while poorly designed spaces may contribute to occupants’ sensations of discomfort, or, in more extreme cases, induce migraines.

While design for wellbeing isn’t a new concept, traditionally the approach has predominantly been applied to healthcare settings. However, every built environment, from workplaces and schools to homes and public spaces, has a profound impact on the physical and mental health of its users.

Arguably, our ethical responsibilities grow with this knowledge. If design choices impact on stress, cognition or a range of other physiological functions, there is a resultant ethical duty to minimise the negative effects that result from the design of the built environment.

This ethical responsibility is not limited to architects. It extends to everyone involved in the design and delivery of the built environment. Developers, city planners, policymakers, engineers and even the end-users all play crucial roles in shaping our surroundings.

Collaborative efforts are essential to ensure that health and wellbeing are prioritised at every stage. Applying neuroarchitectural insights into practice isn’t simple. Projects face budget constraints, complex and often conflicting client needs, regulatory compliance, deadlines, and the list goes on.

Understanding of the public-health ramifications of architecture and urban design is urgently needed

Structural industry changes require support. Regulatory frameworks and guidelines need to evolve to embrace these insights.

This isn’t about adding bureaucracy, but providing tools that help create spaces that support wellbeing. Embedding neuroarchitectural knowledge into standard practice makes human health considerations as fundamental to project outcomes as structural safety.

In bringing about this shift, education plays a crucial role. Here we return to the design review, and the types of spaces and designs that we promote as an industry. If architecture students understand how design impacts emotions and occupant physiological responses, they will be better-positioned to understand the health ramifications of their design decision making.

Expanding industry understanding of, and education about, the public-health ramifications of architecture and urban design is urgently needed. Neuroarchitecture offers clinically evidenced pathways to achieving this understanding.

However, moving forward requires collaboration among architects, researchers, policymakers and educators to close the gap between research and practice. It’s about building systems that allow us to use this knowledge in every project.

In doing so, we redefine what it means to be architects and designers of spaces that support better, healthier lives.

Cleo Valentine and Heather Mitcheltree are researchers based at the University of Cambridge, specialising in the impact of the built environment on neurophysiology and wellbeing. In April, they published a paper on the ethical implications arising from the emerging field of neuroarchitecture in the journal Intelligent Buildings International.

The photo is by Scarbor Siu via Unsplash.

Dezeen In Depth
If you enjoy reading Dezeen’s interviews, opinions and features, subscribe to Dezeen In Depth. Sent on the last Friday of each month, this newsletter provides a single place to read about the design and architecture stories behind the headlines.

The post “Many of our everyday spaces are doing us harm” appeared first on Dezeen.