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Hygge please

The Scandinavians have been doing it for aeons – they hygge (different languages use different terms but “hygge” is the one that English speakers are most familiar with). Hygge makes a space cosy and...

More on how colours influence how we think…

More on how colours influence how we think: Colours that are not too saturated but relatively light are relaxing for us to view while ones that are more saturated and darker are energizing to...

Picking Patterns

Just as the season for painting inside may be ending, so is the one for hanging wallpapers.  Science can tell us a lot about which patterns are best on walls and what researchers have...

The Science of Furniture

Scientists have carefully probed how furniture design influences how people think and behave: An article earlier in this issue discusses patterns for upholstery, etc., here. Wood grain is relaxing for us to view and...

Connecting to a Place

We build relationships with places just as we do with other people and those relationships can be good or not so great.  Also, as with humans, there are advantages to positive relationships, the sorts...

Building in familiarity

Humans usually like to be in places that seem familiar to them—but familiar does not mean exactly the same as spaces previously encountered, just consistent with those other places in important ways, areas where...

What is Home-y?

Many a quest is underway to create a place where someone or other, or some group or other, will feel at home. Workplaces, restaurants, stores, healthcare facilities . . . you name it, even actual...

What makes a happy home?

In 2019 the Happiness Research Institute released The GoodHome Report 2019:  What Makes a Happy Home? and their findings echo those shared above: “after surveying over 13,000 people and interviewing nearly 80 people in 10 European...

The Most Common and Important Errors Design Professionals Seem to Make

None of us are perfect, even people who design for a living.  Unfortunately, design professionals regularly do the following things, which are oh so very un-good for the people using what they’ve designed: Signalling...

Garden Rooms

Margaret Roach reports on “garden rooms” (“The Art of Making Garden Rooms,” https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/10/realestate/the-art-of-making-garden-rooms.html) in The New York Times. She focuses on the development of the Sakonnet Garden, “a private landscape in coastal Rhode Island”...

Ah the Trees of Paris…

Trees matter, a lot.  Looking at them helps us revitalise our tired brains and they help keep temperatures, and stress levels in check just for starters. Writing about trees in Paris, Vivian Song (“Admiring...

Balcony Benefits…

Peters and Masoudinejad studied balconies’ roles in people’s lives.  Their work indicates that balconies can be handy because they can be converted from one use to another, which is especially useful when, for whatever...

Natural environments and positive effects

Koivisto and colleagues share that “Exposure to natural environments has positive psychological effects. These effects have been explained from an evolutionary perspective, emphasizing humans’ innate preference for natural stimuli. . . . The source...

Music and Pain

Howlin, Stapleton, and Rooney collected information from adults experiencing acute pain.  They share that “Music is increasingly being recognised as an adjuvant [auxiliary] treatment for pain management. Music can help to decrease the experience...

Flying high!

It may seem that planes, trains, automobiles, buses, and other vehicles that move you from place to place (and some that you’ve only seen on a screen somewhere, such as spacecraft), are designed entirely...

Plants, Biophilic Design and Technology…

Plants and Biophilic Design You’re very apt to see potted plants, real or artificial, in any transit hub because research has shown that when plants are present in public spaces, people are friendlier, which...

Planes, Trains and Automobiles

Automobiles Our driving performance improves when we’re smelling lemon, so next time you’re buying an in-car air freshener, go lemon. If you can tune the colour of the lights used in your car at...

Ever wanted to take the Hotel decor home with you?

Hotels are, literally, our homes away from home.  We spend time in them when we’re on vacation and having a good time, but also when we’re on business trips and trying like crazy to...

Plants = meditation

Researchers found that looking at plants and guided meditation have similar effects on our mental state. Archary and Thatcher, investigating recovery from mental fatigue (which also degraded mood) found that “distress significantly decreased for...

Circadian lighting and sleep

Benedetti and colleagues found that circadian lighting in offices can improve how well people sleep at night.  They “tested the effects of optimized dynamic daylight and electric lighting on circadian phase of melatonin, cortisol...

Gardening is good for you – more evidence!

Researchers determined, via a study published in PLoS ONE, that “many people may indeed reap mental health benefits from working with plants — even if they’ve never gardened before. . . . gardening activities...

Why do we love the smell after it has rained?

Nabhan, Daugherty, and Hartung report that “Desert dwellers know it well: the smell of rain and the feeling of euphoria that comes when a storm washes over the parched earth. That feeling, and the...

Worthy Waiting Areas – the Long Read

There are times when it seems that most of our lives are being spent waiting for something (for example, an appointment) or someone.  Design can make waiting much more pleasant, and lots of research...

How to Feel Safe/Secure at Home

 We’re more apt to feel safer, that where we live is more “neighbourly,” and actually be more secure when: Cooler colours predominate in the space we’re in. We’re sitting or sleeping so that we...

Hearing and Thinking

Radun and colleagues investigated the effects of particular sorts of sound on cognitive performance and report that “Exposure to impulsive sound (65 dB LAeq) was compared with quiet sound (35 dB LAeq) and steady-state sound (65 dB...

Does living in a green space help us live longer?

Brochu and collaborators link how green an area is and the death rates of residents.  They “conducted a nationwide [in the United States] quantitative health impact assessment to estimate the predicted reduction in mortality...

Coordinating Our Thinking About Sensory Experiences

Scheller and Sui report that “When interacting with the environment, humans exhibit robust biases toward information that pertains to themselves: Self-relevant information is processed faster and yields more accurate responses than information linked to...

Biophilic Design in Workplaces

All those plants you see around your workplace are not there by chance.  Research consistently shows that being able to see a couple of plants (not more) as you work boost your cognitive performance,...

Feel less Frazzled

Even in our world’s best of times, life isn’t always the best-est and our planet’s current predicaments seem to move all of our societies’ wellbeing scores from middle of the road, neither terrible nor...

How to use Sound?

A few of us actively soundscape the worlds in which we live, but way too many of us just let sound happen to us, which is an opportunity missed.  To calm yourself via your...

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