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Richard Mazuch

Director of Design Research and Innovation, Architecture

One in four people in England experience a mental health problem each year, costing the UK more than £94 billion every year.

Home has a major impact on our mental health. Depending on the context, home can be a ‘sanctuary’ as well as a place of major stress. So why is it that mental health is rarely discussed as part of home design? Research informs us that the majority of mental health issues germinate at early childhood and are established by adolescence. However, when assessing the broader picture, emotional health issues inhabit all stages of our lives. Such issues include: loneliness, self-worth/esteem, post/prenatal depression, isolation, obsessive compulsive disorder, chronic fatigue syndrome, sleep deprivation, obsessive compulsive disorders, bipolar depression, and dementia.

Our attention is usually focused on dealing with the effects of mental health rather than the cause. We have a real opportunity to make a difference by investigating the source of mental health issues in the domestic setting. By harnessing assistive design and technology to support neuro diversity and the varying profiles of mental soundness, we can offer major contributions to the Third Era of Health.

 

Home Sweet Home

Illustration of a house with a tree in the backdrop.

The home should be a supportive environment in which to grow and discover ourselves, a place of happiness, mindfulness and wellness. Ideally homes should be places of comfort and safety, offering shelter from the elements and the stressors of the outside world.

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    When our home life is not ideal, it can ultimately become a place of anxiety, distress, extreme sadness and grief. At its worst, it can be unsafe, generating feelings of fear and entrapment. Life events such as retirement, old age, absence of familial support, physical disabilities etc., can prove to be disempowering and debilitating.

     

    The key to understanding mental health is to assess our own dialogical interactions with space, alongside our related interpersonal communication. Most people value their personal spaces and feel discomfort, anxiety and distress when these spaces are encroached.

     

    Many homes experience volatile ‘pressure cooker’ scenarios, ‘flash point’ moments, emotional outbursts, etc. The design and planning of the home should enable individuals to freely retire to multiple de-escalation spaces. Many schools, nurseries and rehab centres offer calming rooms for withdrawal with the aim of de-escalating from a current emotional state within a safe space. Every home should incorporate a variety of personal, decompression, de-escalation, and safe spaces where one can freely withdraw from the noisy hubbub of daily life or simply step away from others. These spaces can offer quiet moments of reflection and contemplation or just simple distraction.

     

    Researchers have consistently reported the stress-reducing and restorative benefits of looking at nature. Clinical research illustrates how viewing nature can rapidly calm and sedate us by lowering our respiration rate, blood pressure and heart rate while early morning sunlight has been proven to substantially accelerate bipolar recovery. Within a domestic setting, one may consider framing, composing, and landscaping outdoor space, as viewed from within.

 

Biophilic Design

Illustration portraying the various phases of life.

Biophilic design is an innovative and rapidly growing method of designing the spaces within which we live. The most significant benefits of biophilia can be seen in healthcare applications to improve mental health and physical wellbeing. Recent research supports measurable, positive outcomes of biophilic design on health that can expedite healing. Ben Channon in his book Happy by Design – A Guide to Architecture and Mental Wellbeing states that “regardless of other factors ‘nature relatedness’ is a reliable predictor of happiness”. Increasingly, clinicians are referring patients to nature-based interventions. Their ‘green prescriptions’ include gardening, fitness activities, reiki, yoga and growing vegetables in adjacent allotments.

 

Calming and Energizing Spaces

A visual representation of the relationship between the five senses.

Calming and energising spaces can also positively impact mental wellness at home. Relaxing environments can be established to calm and reduce agitation by using dimmed, warm spectral light, temperature adjustment, soothing soundscapes, relaxing scent emitters, etc. On the other hand, an energizing ambiance can be stimulated by increasing blue spectral light, dynamic visuals, up-tempo soundscapes, and invigorating seascape smells.

 

Digital Mental Health

Today, digital technology assists us in the treatment of common mental health conditions. The use of electronic and communication technologies as a therapeutic and mental health care practice is beginning to come to the fore. It is commonly referred to as Telemedicine or eHealth.

Augmented Reality (AR) and Virtual Reality (VR) technology can help desensitize post-traumatic stress disorders, helping people to develop coping techniques within the safety of the home. Mental health apps such as: Calm, Moodnotes, Headspace, Pacifica and Talkspace have proven very effective for younger people who are more likely to suffer from stress and anxiety. On the flip side, technology can also disrupt sleep through blue light emissions, intermittent sonic reminders and it’s pressure for us to remain connected 24/7.

The Third Era of Health presents very real opportunities to deliver optimal neuro-supportive environments embedded in the homes of tomorrow. Let us find new ways to inform and empower residents to actively choreograph their respective domestic spaces to address neuro diversity within the growing percentile of multi-generational homes. A better the relationship between people, their mental health and relationship to their environment will clearly inform the design of tomorrow’s salutogenic home and ultimately help staunch the daily increase in mental health statistics.

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