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Sunlight

Vermeer has been the darling of the art world, and loads of people outside that hallowed circle, for years, and in “Why We Want to Live (and Work) in That Vermeer Light” Emily Barger...

Plants Prevail

As they do most Springs when plants revive outside, plants inside are a hot topic. In “Eight Ways Indoor Plants Can Improve Your Home” (2023, https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20230324-eight-ways-indoor-plants-can-improve-your-home) Dominic Lutyens shares that worldwide “a trend for...

We like what we know

Darda and colleagues share that they “we explored Northern American and Indian participants’ aesthetic judgments and preferences for abstract and representational artworks. . . . no evidence was found for an ingroup bias ....

Benefits of Being in a City

Movies and television shows and books and magazine articles (every sort of media, it seems) makes city living seem oh so exciting and in many ways quite irresistible.  Country living is presented as fine,...

Managing Sightlines

Most of us, happily, have well-functioning eyes that make it easy for us to look around us, but what are the best sightlines for us through a space? Having a sightline view of at...

Robert Downey Junior’s home

Here in The Space Doctors’ newsletter we often talk about how seeing curves (in 2-dimensions in patterns in wallpapers and upholstery and 3-dimensions in the gently rolled arms of a sofa or walls of...

Turf Houses – Biophilic Design on Steroids!

Goodness, I LOVE these! The BBC brings worldwide attention to the turf homes that have gotten people from Iceland through the winter for many generations.  Their use of materials, placement in situ, and really...

Art and Real-life

Stone-Ferrier studied paintings depicting 17th-century Dutch neighborhoods and her findings highlight the cultural information that art can convey.  A press release related to Stone-Ferrier’s work reports that “The importance of knowing what’s going on...

Sound Effects on Sights

Sounds have such a profound effect on us. Williams and teammates share that “Visual object recognition is not performed in isolation but depends on prior knowledge and context. Here, we found that auditory context...

Water experiences as a child – lifelong implications

Vitale and colleagues report that via “data from an 18-country sample (N = 15,743) the current work extended previous research by examining: a) blue spaces (coasts, rivers, lakes, etc.) in particular; b) associations between adults’ recalled...

Measuring Cognability

A research team based at the University of Michigan is making available, without charge, an easy-to-use tool that can be used to determine how well a particular area supports the cognitive health of aging...

Designing for Aging Individuals

A team from the University of Stirling has developed a tool that can be used to create environments that support aging individuals and those with dementia; it is available at a weblink in the...

Shape, Sensation Links

Juravle, Olari, and Spence report that “Rounded shapes, which have been shown to enhance sweetness, were compared to the perfectly symmetrical Platonic solids. . . . participants were presented with a rotating three-dimensional geometric...

Re-nesting – The Long Read

Even if as you read this it isn’t officially autumn yet, you know that summer is past and we are beginning to settle into another winter slog toward Spring and a return to indoor-outdoor...

Picking Colours

As the days grow shorter, your opportunities to paint whatever might need painting in your home fewer.  So, the question of the moment becomes:  what colours should you select for those walls, ceilings, doors,...

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...

Artists’ Studios

The design of artists’ studios is currently getting a lot of attention.  For example, Clare Dowdy of bbc.com (“Behind the Scenes:  10 Revealing Images of Artists’ Studios,” https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20220914-behind-the-scenes-10-artists-studios-through-the-centuries ) probes studios depicted in James...

Online IRL trials

Abrams writes about online trials; her work indicates factors that legal professionals feel are important in physical courtrooms.  Courtrooms “tend to feel grand and formal, bedecked with wood panelling, an American flag, and security...

Two Circadian Lighting Studies

Two recent studies probed how circadian lighting influences the experiences of older individuals Grant and colleagues investigated falls in care homes by elderly (mean age 81 +/- 12 years old) residents: some test locations...

Different places different thoughts

Schertz and teammates report that they “measure[d] differences in thought content and affect throughout a one-hour environmental exploration of a nature conservatory and a large indoor mall. . . . while visiting the conservatory,...

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...

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...

Designing for Bonding

Design can influence the bonds we form with other people, just as it can affect how attached we feel to a space.  We’ll form more positive and lasting attachments to other people in certain...

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...

Nature and Nurture?

Koivisto and Grassini conclude “that humans may have an inherited hard-wired tendency to respond with positive affects [moods] to nature, whereas the affective responses to urban scenes are more influenced by individual factors. ....

Do we zoom creativity out of us?

Brucks and Levav investigated creativity during Zoom-type sessions. They found via a lab study (involving participants worldwide) and a field study that “videoconferencing inhibits the production of creative ideas. By contrast, when it comes...

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