Sustainable Mediterranean Construction

Sustainable Mediterranean Construction

GREEN IN HOSPITALS – THE NECESSITY

Authors  

Fotini Daskayanni

Keywords: 

Hospital gardens, Healing gardens, Green spaces, Outdoor spaces, Health outcome, Healthcare Design.

File Size 290 KB
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Abstract

Man’s contact with nature is an important and integral part of his prosperity. Various researches shows that nature has a positive effect on the physical condition, on psychology and, consequently, on the socialization of man.
Studies in healthcare support the association of nature with healing. It has been shown that both passive exposure to landscapes or more active interactions with nature are psychologically and physically beneficial to humans and act as a catalyst in the treatment and rehabilitation of a patient’s health.
In healthcare facilities, the positive results from the contact of humans with nature do not positively affect only patients but all users of the facility (visitors, family environment, workers) and this is the reason why green spaces are so important and necessary.
The necessity of a conversation between natural environment and healthcare facilities had been recognized since antiquity and continued to exist until the 20th century, where it played a secondary role. Hospitals have become institutionalized, alienated from their users, and have begun to give a sense of fear to them. In last decades, there has been a redefinition of the conversation of the surrounding space with the healthcare facilities resulting from the redefinition of the conversation between healthcare facilities and human beings. At the same time, the health sector can be profitable for a state and also peoples’ choices as to where they decide to trust their health are many. Health centers now try to be more competitive, so they redefine their benefits [1]. Environments that can successfully accommodate social support at various levels are necessary. Such are the welldesigned outdoor or indoor spaces, where users come into contact with nature. In healthcare facilities, green environments may include planted areas between building blocks, gardens in front of the main entrance, a central courtyard for population gathering, roof gardens and healing gardens.
The present text attempts to clarify the reasons for the necessity of the existence and proper design of natural environment in healthcare facilities. The aim is to raise awareness of more specialists from Architecture, Agriculture and Medicine in order to reexamine and redesign existing healthcare centers, as well as the more accurate design of new facilities, in which the architectural concept will include natural environments from the beginning.

Preview

SMC N.09 2019

SMC MAGAZINE N. NINE/2019

001_ COVER AND INDEX

003_ VIEW_Green: the new challenge of living
Paola De Joanna

007_ BOARDS AND INFORMATION

FOCUS ON GREEN

008_ The role of greenery in healtcare facilities for children
Artemis Kyrkou

013_Rethinking the green. Technical implementations, bioclimatic involvements and technological perspectives of greenery in Architecture
Valentina Frighi

018_The vegetation as a constant in the Mediterranean cultural landscape
Francisco Pérez Gallego

030_By using GIS technologies into the relationship between urban green and the social and built environment of the Municipality of Pozzuoli
Barbara Cardone, Ferdinando Di Martino, Salvatore Sessa

034_The configurational approach to measure the impact of green spaces on urban landscape
Valerio Di Pinto

040_Green building/infrastructure system with manifacturing/distribution strategy
Pliny Fisk III, Brittany M. Faulkner

044_The role of vegetation in the mechanism of absorption and acoustic isolation
Luca Buoninconti

049_Sensorium | Five senses interaction center. Green and smart healthcare facility
Tasos Tyrimos, Evangelos Chryafidis, Aliki Ralli, Marianna Pontiki

057_When the green enters the buildings: the beneficial impact on users
Ilaria Oberti, Michela Lecci

062_Green in hospital – The necessity
Fotini Daskayanni

066_Visions, perceptions and benefits of natural green
Giuseppe Vaccaro

073_What it means to plant a tree
Gigliola Ausiello, Enza Santoro

079_A method for the ecological use of vegetation in the built environment
Mauirizio Sibilla, Anna Barbati

086_Green materials and applications, the future for a green product design
Georgia Chieirchanteri

093_Integrated methodologies for the knowledge and regeneration of the Paestum site. The role of the nature between the temples and the sea
Riccardo Florio, Raffaele Catuogno, Teresa Della Corte

102_The forest as a tool to regenerate urban and sub-urban environments
Christina Conti, Giovanni La Varra, Ambra Pecile

107_Green interventions for reconnecting urban liminal spaces. Two experiences in research and teaching
Filippo Angelucci, Claudia Di Girolamo

112_Techno-functional green-lines. Comparing urban experiences
Rossella Franchino, Caterina Frettoloso, Francesca Muzzillo, Antonella Violano

120_Frontiers of green architecture
Sonia Capece, Camelia Chivaran

127_+4°C. Green design and extreme climate change
Federico Orsini

132_Green walls as nature-based solutions for urban and building resilience: a case study
Silvia Tedesco, Elena Montacchini, Roberto Giordano, Federica Larcher

137_Rooftop farming in Buenos Aires: nature-based solutions for urban resilience
Francesca De Filippi, Francesca Letizia, Emanuela Saporito

142_Green-algae resilient architecture
Antonella Violano, Monica Cannaviello

150_Sustainable technologies for bioregionalist architecture. Regulatory aspects and pilot experiences
Luca Buoninconti, Paola De Joanna, Giuseppe Vaccaro

158_LIST OF AUTHORS

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