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back to press coverage Buildings, July 2005 |
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Custom Ceilings Can Offer a New View of Healthy, Productive Interiors
By Regina Raiford BabcockBill Witherspoon, founder, The Sky Factory, Fairfield, IA, discusses how a custom ceiling installation inspired by nature can play a major part in creating calm, productive interiors.
Is there a trend among facilities managers to bring nature indoors? Absolutely! We have done tremendous things with technology. Nonetheless, these [high-tech] facilities are [perceived] by staff, patients, and visitors as being very cold and very unfriendly. [In health-care environments,] there has been an essential and critical emphasis on technology, but now there is an attempt to really attend to the whole well-being of the patient. And that means doing things a little bit differently. Patients also appreciate the fact that management has recognized the need for this experience of nature and have provided it. A kind of loyalty develops. Healthcare facilities are springing up like mushrooms. These places have to compete, and the way they compete is on the level of patient satisfaction. What are some of the benefits of choosing a unique ceiling? This triggers a psychological and a physiological response of relaxation,
well-being, and freedom. Imagine the impact of this for patients
lying on their backs in an oncology center. What are some of the different applications for a custom ceiling? A magician can make a tiger disappear or saw a person in half. That
is what makes magic: Our eyes believe it, but our intellect knows
for sure that [what we are seeing] is not true. We form a relationship
with illusions and
buy into them. The walls and the floors are used up, but no one
is doing anything with ceilings. It is fresh territory. The Nature of Healing In 1984, a study by Dr. Robert Ulrich ("View Through a Window May Influence Recovery from Surgery," Science, Volume 224, April 1984) found that post-surgical patients with a view of trees vs. patients with a view of a brick wall had shorter post-operative stays, required less medication, and experienced fewer post-surgical complications. This landmark study inspired future interest in looking at the relationship between nature and the built environment. Another essay (MJ Friedrich, "The Arts of Healing," Journal of the American Medical Association, 1999) showed that psychologically appropriate art substantially affects such patient outcomes as high blood pressure, anxiety, intake of pain medication, and length of hospital stay. Representational nature art was shown to have a particularly beneficial effect on patients' stress and anxiety.
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