The Importance of Domestic Space in the Times of COVID-19 (original) (raw)

RETHINKING THE HOME: CHANGE IN PERCEPTION OF RESIDENTIAL SPACE IN THE POST PANDEMIC ERA

2021

One of the essential characteristics of the everyday architectural experience is that it is not comprised of static perception; it is dynamic, occurring through bodily movement. during this habitual experience change plays a crucial role. Interactions of people with their surroundings; built or natural, is what essentially encompasses a lifestyle. So, the relation between the encompassing physical environment and behaviour is deep-rooted and interwoven. Post-pandemic there is a change in perception of how we view our home. The aim of this study is to assess how a person’s perception of their residential environment has changed due to the lockdown. To assess the negative impacts of the pandemic/lockdown on the mental and physical well-being of people and explore the role of architecture in mitigating the negative impacts of lockdown and work from home. Propose change in spatial design approach in residences to optimise available space through multifunctional perspectives to increase adaptability and flexibility.

Rethinking Interior Spaces for Work from Amidst the Pandemic

International Journal for Research in Applied Science & Engineering Technology (IJRASET), 2022

Amidst the Covid-19 pandemic, people refrained from going out and started working from home. Millions of employees' working arrangements have changed, and many may continue to work from home in some form for the foreseeable future. This research paper addresses the everyday challenges people face while working from home. To address the lack of workspace, people formed a separate working area or an integrated space with the habitable rooms. Spending the maximum amount of time indoors impacted them psychologically. Hence, there is a need to redesign the current workspace for a better lifestyle. The study attempts to establish a relationship between habitable spaces and work areas in residence.

AN ASSESSMENT OF PARADIGM SHIFT IN PEOPLE'S PRIORITIES TOWARD INTERIOR DESIGNING OF SPACE DURING THE PANDEMIC OUTBREAK

Granthaalayah Publications and Printers, 2024

This investigation surfaces a thought of change in peoples' priorities toward Interior design of space during the Pandemic outbreak. It reexamines the issues that influenced the change in the overall arrangement of a physical space. Five constructs were identified to validate the paradigm shift in peoples' approach to dealing with spatial areas specifically in housing during the pandemic outbreak. The research study has shown a strong paradigm shift in the resident's approach to the interior design of housing. The research study also discusses about the issues faced while stay at home during COVID-19, spatial layout during the pandemic, the utility of space during the pandemic, and targeting to achieve the required resilience through design implications. There were 404 participants considered in the structured questionnaire survey where the snowball sample technique to distribute among the policymakers, planners, architects, interior designers, and general citizens, from various residential areas in the Chandigarh Capital Region (CCR) i.e., Chandigarh, Mohali, and Panchkula who responded on varied issues faced during COVID-19. The outlook of people's approach and interior design community to post-COVID has offered a new opportunity to re-look at the spatial arrangement of interior space. The residential dwelling units that were earlier considered for relaxation, safety, and storage are now considered for online classes, office work, play areas, recreation, and exercise areas. The post-COVID-19 era has changed the outlook of habitable space by providing a new thought process to visualize a spatial layout uniquely, which may further full-fill multiple interests at the same time.

Rethinking housing design in post COVID-19 pandemic

Universite Abou Bekr Belkaid, 2021

2019 has been identified as a year of an outbreak that causes respiratory illness and leads to death. The COVID-19 pandemic originated from Wuhan, China, and it has spread to other parts of the world in a short period of time. The pandemic has crippled the world economy and it has brought a catastrophic effect on the world health care systems and our way of life. With the society, politics, culture and the economy turned upside down because of the pandemic, the idea of reforming architectural production has escalated. Due to the effects of covid-19 pandemic, People are now looking for answers and solutions from architects so that they can feel safe in their own homes and environments. As we try to understand the role of architecture in a post pandemic era. We need to first comprehend how we inhabit our dwellings, make use of our buildings and how we traverse through our belt space. Architects have been given the role to rethink about the future we desire now. This will equip our society to prepare for any future pandemics. In this thesis, we look at the effects of Covid-19 on -architecture, interior design and the built environment- and provide design solutions for a healthier living space in the post pandemic era. The idea of the project is to design a residential complex that is affordable and incorporated with design solutions that reduce the risk of infection of any virus in the future.

Post-Pandemic Home Design Adaptations: Lessons Learnt for Future Theory and Practice

Civil Engineering and Architecture, 2021

During the widespread of the Covid-19 pandemic in the year 2020, "staying home" became one of the crucial means of survival. Being an architect and educator during this crucial time raised many questions of whether our current practice and pedagogy place homes in their adequate socio-psychological status. Thus, this research aims to document, analyze and compare selected examples of home adaptations in 2020. The methodology adopted in the research depended on deductive qualitative methods. Analysis of the spaces was conducted by the researcher based on first-hand data. Surveys were distributed among a wide sample, among whom were the in-depth study sample. And finally, interviews were conducted to assess the level of comfort and tools of adaptations made by the residents during the lockdown. The study concludes with lessons learned from the pandemic outbreak to enhance architectural practice as well as pedagogy while addressing the future of home designs.

The Rediscovery of our Dwelling Space during Covid-19

PANDEMICS AND THE CHANGING BUILT ENVIRONMENT LEARNING FROM HISTORY, PLANNING OUR FUTURE , 2024

Viruses & bacteria have always been, and continue to be a possible threat to humanity, infecting and potentially killing millions. Some diseases are exaggerated while others are fatal, either way, the fear of death plagues our thoughts as a viral pandemic crisis threatens our existential being. In 2020, a virus identified as COVID-19 spread dramatically throughout the world, forcing different states and countries to declare a state of emergency, thereby enforcing a lockdown on its citizens. Such a phenomenon drives people to adapt to new living conditions. As a result, dwellings have been revitalized in their fundamental functions, reassuring us in their essential role as a “safe haven.” Due to the resurfacing of our dwelling’s importance, we started to adapt to different social measures, these measures that have been ignored for some time now are regaining their existential importance ever since they had been lost. This paper discusses the impact of the COVID-19 Virus on our dwelling habitats and social environment in an urban context. Moreover, we show examples of how dwellers remodified their interior spaces to enhance their overall well-being.

Exogenous design for Covid Homes

For months we have been locked inside a philosophical perimeter without noticed. The lockdown pushed us to re-evaluate balconies, attend kitchens instead of restaurants, invoke studios to zoom in peace. Nothing. We considered it an emergency. We kept thinking that the unfolding of life was out, suspended, just waiting for us. (...) Nobody, except the homeless, lives in cities, but houses. It is the houses that produce and justify gender inequalities and economic inequalities. (...) The pandemic has given us the urgency to face the future now" (Romagnoli, 2021). History teaches us that in the extended time of design, the emergence easily becomes customary. What if pandemic dwelling fall into this category? This paper aims to address the domestic space as the main victim of the pandemic, and enhance a rethinking in terms of flexibility and change. A change that comes from within: an exogenous design for a pandemic dwelling.

Post-pandemic urban design: The equilibrium between social distancing and social interactions within the built environment

Elsevier, 2022

The previous arguments in respect to the COVID-19 pandemic tend to support the lockdown and closure policy in order to prevent widespread infection of the epidemic within urban spaces. Using semi-structured interviews, the present study identifies that there are some serious consequences by adopting this policy due to the indispensable social interactions and uncooperative attitude of the general public to the harsh isolation approaches. These negative impacts on people's psychological health are partly caused by the inflexible urban design of the built environment in the pre-pandemic period. To create a balance between social distancing and social interactions within urban spaces, the paper proposes a general framework of post-pandemic street furniture design. It provides an innovative approach using a grid-based method, which can be applied to other cities across the world in order to deal with the potential analogous pandemic perils in the future.

COVID-19, design and social needs: an investigation of emerging issues

Rivista Tema

The global public health crisis generated by the spread of COVID-19 has revealed – and is still showing – the strong correlation between two apparently disparate fields of research: built environment and health. Although in this time of emergency, the science of architecture could offer a remarkable contribution to rethinking new living and working spaces, the ongoing pandemic has, in terms of people’s well-being, disclosed the weaknesses of a vast number of architectural design choices implemented until now. Hence, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the users’ space fulfilment has been herein explored and analysed through a systematic literature review process for collecting data and exploring gaps and opportunities revealed in this period. The COVID-19 pandemic and especially the quarantine constrictions have revealed a high level of dissatisfaction with the quality of living space as well as the lack of flexibility and adaptability. This study has outlined the main critical a...

Healthy Architecture! Can Environments Evoke Emotional Responses?

Global Journal of Health Science, 2012

We find environmental psychology at the intersection between architecture and psychology. This article discusses the ways in which individuals are affected by architecture, departing from an early source on the psychology of architecture and taking three architectural examples as illustrations: a public place in Berlin, a health environment in Sweden, and a fitness centre in Denmark. Each of these architectural examples creates what might be called its own psychological emotions, and these are analysed and discussed using a psychodynamic and existential attempt to understand the interrelationship between individuals and spatial reality. A health oriented existential approach is used as a methodological basis to conceptualise the psychological effects of various forms of architecture.