Kastamonu Devlet Hastanesi̇ Bahçesi̇ni̇n Terapi̇k Açisindan Değerlendi̇ri̇lmesi̇ (original) (raw)
Related papers
Landscape Design in Hospital Gardens: The Example of Selcuk University Medical Faculty Hospital
Turkish Journal of Agriculture -Food Science and Technology, 2023
Hospital gardens, located within urban open-green areas, are places created for patients coming to the hospital, their relatives and the staff working in the hospital to spend time in an environment where they can renew themselves. The importance of these places is increasing day by day. The purpose of this study is to examine the landscape design of the Selcuk University Faculty of Medicine hospital garden located on the Selcuk University Alaeddin Keykubad Campus. The findings show that the hospital garden was generally not designed in accordance with landscape design principles. With the suggestions developed, this hospital garden can be redesigned in accordance with landscape design principles and made more comfortable for people using the hospital garden.
Examination of Hospital Landscape Design Principles, Case Study of Five Hospitals in Baku
Architecture and Urban Planning
This study aims to evaluate hospital outdoor design landscaping requirements. In addition to taking into account user groups such as adult and child patients, hospital staff and visitors, also such elements as hospital entrances and exits, parking areas, hospital roads, children’s playgrounds, rest areas, water elements, art elements, field furniture, planting and maintenance subjects were determined to be important in a successful hospital garden design. A checklist has been prepared that includes these identified issues. The checklist was tested on five selected hospitals in Baku, Azerbaijan. According to a comparative analysis of hospital outdoor designs, it was determined that the Liv Bona Dea Hospital topped the list, followed by the National Oncology Hospital as having the most successful open space hospital designs.
Journal of Applied Life Sciences International, 2018
Aims: The aim of the study was to evaluate landscape preferences in a newly built hospital's garden (Isparta City Hospital) and comprehensive observations and suggestions of that subject. Study Design: Relevant literature information's and documentation were utilized for the evaluation of this hospital design approaches and applicable recommendations given in view of landscape architecture discipline. Place and Duration of Study: This study was conducted November 2017 through May 2018 in Isparta city, Turkey. Methodology: The detailed information's were undertaken from site visits. However, besides site observations, aerial photographs, face to face interviews with project staff were conducted and evaluations were made under the landscape architecture design criterias. Moreover, relevant literature information's for the hospital design to meet the need for preliminary functions and
Landscape Preference Evaluation for Hospital Environmental Design
This paper examined users' preferences for landscape design of grounds and spaces surrounding hospitals, in order to assess how they perceived the landscape facilities so as to make future open spaces of hospitals suitable to users' needs. The method of the research was based on quantifying a questionnaire survey of a representative sample of personnel (doctors, nurses, administrative staff and medical students) by using the stratified sample research programme that was carried out in March 2007 at the University Hospital of the city of Alexandroupolis, situated in northeastern Greece. The results of study show that users of hospital cared about footpaths, resting areas, social and public spaces, personal spaces, water features and a dominant, limited range of colors in landscaping. They also require environment that supports the principles and specifications of Therapeutic Hospital Gardens. Based on the results of this research, 1) interventions have been proposed (e.g., footpaths, resting areas, social and public spaces, personal spaces, water features and a dominant, limited range of colors in landscaping), and 2) the principles and specifications for the landscape design of Therapeutic Hospital Gardens have also been evaluated and have been redefined in the light of the study findings. These results also provide the opportunity for health care decision makers to apply and to incorporate user considerations into overall landscape design for current and future health care programs.
2018
The physical environments, in which we exist, live and share many things, affect people in terms of psychological, biological, ergonomic and social meanings, and the space characteristics reveal its life quality. Many building types encountered as public space in these days shelter many building users due to the quality of the presented service. The quality of the building and its relation with the environment come out as the components that should be questioned for the intensively used public type of buildings. Not only the lived and directly experienced medium but also the environment in which the building exists becomes an input increasing the using value of the building, because every building gains value in its own context by affecting the environment and being affected from the environment. In this sense, the public buildings have functions serving to the city and sometimes to the surrounding cities due to their type of functions. The health buildings are considered in a wide ...
Landscape Preference Evaluation for Therapeutical Gardens
The present paper deals with the usefulness of outdoor spaces of nursing institutions which we name "therapeutic" gardens. A therapeutic garden offers a locality where the patients and their healers might achieve the objectives of therapeutic process. The research of present paper was based on the inclusion of various individual factors that concerns in the Hospital of Alexandroupolis. Thus, they were taken into consideration: (a) the opinions of workers and the students of Medicine (questionnaires), (b) analysis of environment, (c) aesthetics of landscape, (d) beginnings of Architecture of landscape (e) literature review. Some of the results of the research demonstrate that people need to work and be treated in a more humane and less stressful environment, with variation of landscapes included also several uses which could function as a multiple use "therapeutic" garden. Following the examination of views of the aforementioned groups of people, the designerlandscape architect is given the possibility to take into account the views of users and combining them with his personal identity, be able to create a representative master plan of the external area and a detailed design.
Hospital Outdoor Landscape Design
InTech eBooks, 2013
Research shows that rehabilitative structures and procedures enhance both the physical endurance and the physical well-being of patients. Interaction with a natural environment Advances in Landscape Architecture 382 2. Outdoor hospital spaces 2.1. Typology of outdoor spaces in hospitals 2.1.1. Landscaped grounds Green areas between buildings, primarily used for waiting and eating in, link the architecture with walking paths; however, they may be expensive to maintain. Hospital Outdoor Landscape Design 383 2.1.2. Landscaped setbacks These are usually planted areas in front of the main entrance, which are visually pleasant and serve to separate the hospital building from the street. 2.1.3. Front porches These may include overhangs or porch roofs, an area where vehicles can pick up or drop off passengers, sitting areas, signs with directions, a mailbox, telephone booth, bus stop, etc. 2.1.4. Entry gardens These are visually pleasant green spaces designed like gardens and located near hospital entrances.
Effect of Hospital Landscaping on the Health and Recovery of Patients
The visible landscape is believed to have effect on human beings in many ways. It provides aesthetic appreciation and health as well as the whole well-being of the human. The present research work was carried out at Aga Khan Hospital, Karachi and Faisalabad, Institute of Cardiology to investigate the effect of outdoor landscape and interior plant scaping on patient's health and recovery. Supportive information about the benefits of landscape on patient's well being was collected. The results revealed that 96.7% patients liked to see greenery around hospital vicinity. Regarding the benefits of hospital landscape, 76.7% patients reported improved mental health, 62.5% patients reported faster recovery from illness, 65.0% patients reported released stress, 94.2% patients reported healing effects, 96.7% patients reported therapeutic benefits, 95.0% patients reported pleasing effect of indoor plants, 97.5% patients reported soothing effects of plants and 83.3% patients reported psychological benefits. Among all the respondents 98.3% reported that they liked to spend time in hospital garden and liked to view plants which ultimately improve their health. In respondent's opinion the hospital landscape strongly affected their health and viewing landscape around hospital provided calming effect.
An evaluation of the design of room characteristics of a sample of healing gardens
WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment, 2008
The present paper discusses the evaluation and description of the landscape characteristics of a sample of healing gardens from the USA and England. Healing gardens are designed in such a way as to influence the visitor by provoking positive emotions and to help relieve the symptoms of stress or depression. The aim of the paper is to analyse a sample of healing gardens on the basis of eight characteristics that, according to the literature, should be present in a garden for it to be classified as a healing garden and that may also be considered some of the fundamental building blocks of parks and gardens in general. The term "room" is used to convey a sense that each garden consists of a set of distinct spaces that are separated from each other and which are experienced by visitors as part of a sequence. Rooms can be generally described using a specific name to which a set of characteristics is attached. Each room type (Serene, Wild, Rich in Species, Space, the Common, the Pleasure garden, Festive, Culture) was evaluated in terms of the degree to which the characteristics were present using the following scale: 0-not present, 1-weak, 2-medium, 3-strong. Following this a description of the design characteristics was carried out from the point of view of landscape design elements and structure, including an assessment of presence of the sense of the personal/impersonal. The purpose of the investigation is to determine which characteristics are mostly frequently used in the design of healing gardens, which characteristics most strongly feature and to analyse the main design elements. In total, 40 healing gardens were visited, 20 from England (summer 2005) and 20 from various states in New England in the USA (summer 2006). There were no apparent differences between the characteristics of healing garden rooms between the countries (t-test). Correlations were found between the types "Rich in Species" and "Festive" (0.85) and "Culture" (0.85) which tends to be found together in the gardens. The types "Space" and "The Common" had a high correlation (0.8) in England. "Rich in Species" and "Festive" had a correlation (0.9) in the USA. Of the gardens studied, the types "Rich in Species" and "the Common" are distinguished by the strongest presence. The personal characteristic was found to be present less than the impersonal. The characteristic "The Pleasure garden" does not exist in most of the gardens-it is possibly an expensive solution. The existence of the characteristics in the gardens does not depend on the idea of the design as a whole, and the strength of the characteristics will tend to influence the users the most.