Kids in the atrium: Comparing architectural intentions and children's experiences in a pediatric hospital lobby

The study reported here adopts an interdisciplinary focus to elicit children's views about hospital environments. Based at the Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), Toronto, the research explores the ways in which designers and patients understand and use the eight-storey lobby, The Atrium, a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2010-03, Vol.70 (5), p.658-667
Hauptverfasser: Adams, Annmarie, Theodore, David, Goldenberg, Ellie, McLaren, Coralee, McKeever, Patricia
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container_issue 5
container_start_page 658
container_title Social science & medicine (1982)
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creator Adams, Annmarie
Theodore, David
Goldenberg, Ellie
McLaren, Coralee
McKeever, Patricia
description The study reported here adopts an interdisciplinary focus to elicit children's views about hospital environments. Based at the Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), Toronto, the research explores the ways in which designers and patients understand and use the eight-storey lobby, The Atrium, a monumental addition constructed in 1993. It is a public place that never closes; hundreds of children pass through the namesake atrium every day. Combining methodological approaches from architectural history and health sociology, the intentions and uses of central features of the hospital atrium are examined. Data were collected from observations, focused interviews, and textual and visual documents. We locate the contemporary atrium in a historical context of building typologies rarely connected to hospital design, such as shopping malls, hotels and airports. We link the design of these multi-storey, glass-roofed spaces to other urban experiences especially consumption as normalizing forces in the everyday lives of Canadian children. Seeking to uncover children's self-identified, self-articulated place within contemporary pediatric hospitals, we assess how the atrium—by providing important, but difficult-to-measure functions such as comfort, socialization, interface, wayfinding, contact with nature and diurnal rhythms, and respite from adjacent medicalized spaces—contributes to the well-being of young patients. We used theoretical underpinnings from architecture and humanistic geography, and participatory methods advocated by child researchers and theorists. Our findings begin to address the significant gap in understanding about the relationship between the perceptions of children and the settings where their healthcare occurs. The study also underlines children's potential to serve as agents of architectural knowledge, reporting on and recording their observations of hospital architecture with remarkable sophistication.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.10.049
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The study also underlines children's potential to serve as agents of architectural knowledge, reporting on and recording their observations of hospital architecture with remarkable sophistication.</abstract><cop>Kidlington</cop><pub>Elsevier Ltd</pub><pmid>19962223</pmid><doi>10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.10.049</doi><tpages>10</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Adolescent
Architecture
Biological and medical sciences
Canada
Canada Children's healthcare architecture Place Participatory research Photo-elicitation Evidence-based design Hospitals
Child
Children
Children & youth
Children's healthcare architecture
Evidence-based design
Female
General aspects
Health care
Hospital Design and Construction
Hospitals
Hospitals, Pediatric
Hospitals, Urban
Humans
Interior Design and Furnishings
Interviews as Topic
Male
Medical sciences
Methodology (Data Collection)
Miscellaneous
Observation
Ontario
Participatory research
Patients
Pediatrics
Perception
Photo-elicitation
Place
Psychological aspects
Psychology, Adolescent
Psychology, Child
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Social Environment
title Kids in the atrium: Comparing architectural intentions and children's experiences in a pediatric hospital lobby
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