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Dissertation

Building design for people with dementia: a comparative analysis of planning quality in residential aged care units

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Citation

Quirke M (2019) Building design for people with dementia: a comparative analysis of planning quality in residential aged care units. Doctor of Architecture. University of Newcastle, Australia. https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/manager/Repository/uon:35038

Abstract
International literature consistently reports that more than half of people living in residential aged care have a diagnosis of dementia. Research findings in this field concur that well-designed physical environments can increase independence, enhance quality of life, and provide a drug-free means of improving the behavioural and psychological symptoms experienced by people living with dementia. Despite this, there has been limited research into how well the broad stock of existing residential aged care settings supports the needs of residents with dementia. This dissertation investigates the design quality of existing residential aged care units, with a focus on the impact of architectural planning layouts on overall dementia design quality. Specifically, the dissertation develops new knowledge in terms of three interconnected research aims. The first research aim is to evaluate and compare dementia design quality in the layout planning of NSW-based and international best-practice examples of residential aged care units. To fulfil this aim, the dissertation uses floor-plan layouts to evaluate the dementia design characteristics of ninety residential aged care units from New South Wales (NSW), Australia, and compares these against the characteristics of ninety-four published international best-practice examples. The second research aim is to determine whether the dementia-enabling characteristics of floor-plan layouts for residential aged care units in NSW have improved over the last four decades. This aim is addressed by correlating the dementia design evaluation scores, from the analyses undertaken as part of the first research aim, against the year of construction for each unit. The third aim of the research is to investigate the impact of five spatial planning factors on the dementia design properties of Australian and international residential aged care settings. The five factors are: the unit floor area, number of bed-spaces provided, floor area per resident, storey location, and whether purpose-built for dementia or not. The research undertaken for this aim builds on the results of the first two aims by undertaking correlation analyses between the identified attributes and the dementia design evaluation scores for each residential aged care unit. In order to fulfil the three aims of the research, a new evidence-supported dementia design evaluation methodology is developed. This method, derived from Fleming’s (2011) Environmental Audit Tool, forms the basis of evaluations undertaken of the layout planning of the ninety NSW-recruited residential aged care units, and ninety-four international units, considered to be exemplars of dementia design. This new design evaluation approach produces formal scored measures of dementia design quality across nine established dementia design principles. These evaluations help to identify strengths and weaknesses in the layout planning of individual units and allow comparisons of design quality between sets of units. The results developed in response to the first aim show that the international exemplars tend to provide higher quality building layouts, with NSW evaluation scores falling behind by a significant margin. The results include the findings that both the NSW and international sets perform well under three of nine established dementia design principles, whilst showing that the most significant differences between the sets occur under four of these principles. There is room for improvement across both sets, but especially so for the NSW unit layouts, having achieved, on average, less than half of the available dementia design quality scores for five of nine dementia design principles. Results from research undertaken to address the second aim show clear improvements in dementia design quality for NSW units over the evaluated period (1970-2016). The most recently constructed NSW units tend to achieve a significantly higher dementia design quality score than those built at earlier dates. International units, assessed for comparison, started at a much higher level of design quality, but also improved significantly over four decades. Analysis of the rate of design improvements between both NSW and international sets show that the dementia design quality of the broad stock of NSW residential aged care units has typically trailed behind the design quality standards of the international exemplars by about twenty years. Findings developed in response to the third research aim include evidence that higher quality residential aged care units have fewer resident bed-spaces and, possibly because of this, tend to be physically smaller. A more contradictory finding is that high scoring residential aged units tend to provide more overall floor area per resident. Results also show that higher quality dementia design tends to occur in units that are located at ground floor and be amongst those purpose-built for accommodating people living with dementia. While the three sets of findings in this dissertation provide valuable information for the aged care sector, the methods and approaches developed to investigate the aims of the research have the potential to be useful for both larger scale evaluations of existing residential care settings, and to inform the design process of future residential aged care settings. This research was undertaken in accordance with the University of Newcastle’s Human Research Ethics Committee Approval No. H-2014-0044.

Keywords
Dementia; Design; Architecture; Building Layouts; Design Assessment

Notes
Full document is stored in the university research data base at University of Newcastle, Australia. Access to full text is restricted by embargo until April 2021.

Funders
SupervisorsProf. Michael Ostwald, Prof. Mark Taylor, Prof. Richard Fleming, Prof. Tony Williams
InstitutionUniversity of Newcastle, Australia
QualificationArray
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People (1)

Dr Martin Quirke

Dr Martin Quirke

Lecturer in Dementia, Ageing & Design, Dementia and Ageing

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