Lockdown impacts home design
Looks at how home design can work to promote wellness.
In the throes of a global pandemic, it’s probably no surprise that designers are focusing on wellness in home design.
Perhaps simply as a result of people spending more time in the home, the annual home design trends survey conducted by the American Institute of Architects (AIA) shows new emphasis on indoor air quality, task lighting and the inclusion of exercise or yoga rooms.
The popularity of the home office also increased a huge 39 per cent in the third quarter of last year.
Wellington architect Judi Keith-brown was not surprised by the results. She says most of her work is in renovations, in which the focus is on fixing houses ‘‘so that they are happier places to be’’.
Keith-brown works with interior and landscape designers and helps clientswith briefs that are all about light, warmth and exposure to outdoor spaces, whether that’s by creating outdoor areas or making sure there is ‘‘visual onto green space’’.
She cites a recent example in Petone where her team brought in a skylight to a dark hallway, and opened the house up to a north-facing courtyard.
‘‘Youwant to come into the house seeing there’s another room. It’s sunny and pretty and the kids can play in the sandpit and you can look out to the vege garden.’’
Keith-brown says lockdown has made people think more about the time they spend at home ‘‘to make it work for their wellness’’.
‘‘So many people still leave early in the morning and get home late but you want to be able to come home after the end of a wintry Wellington day in a vicious southerly and youwant your house to feel welcoming.’’
She said homeowners had been wanting to improve their
‘‘When everything was contained within the home, those rituals within the kitchen became an important way of having purpose and a rhythm and routine.’’
Emma Rea
workspace because of increased numbers working from home.
‘‘You need to have somewhere that you can shut the door on work and hide stuff away.’’
Kitchen as a centre of ritual
Kitchens also became more important spaces in lockdown.
‘‘Kitchenswe used to justwhip in and out of, but now we’re living in them,’’ Keith-brown says.
Student architect Emma Rea, who focused on the kitchen in her project which was a runnerup in the 2020 NZIA Student
Design Awards, says the kitchen’s centrality became important during lockdown.
‘‘When everythingwas contained within the home, those rituals within the kitchen became an importantway of having purpose and a rhythm and routine.’’
In her project, which was also about the relationship between drawing and architecture, bowls of fruit and bunches of flowers from the garden illustrate abundance and health.
Rea says hand-drawing is a ‘‘slow and contemplative’’ process, which allows her to ‘‘carefully articulate the relationship between spaces’’.
In the kitchen, this means thinking through the relationship between, for instance, the bench and the table, cooking and sharing food.
Co-housing design for wellness
Architect Caro Robertson, from Spacecraft Architects, helped the members of the Urban Habitat Collective design its under2020 NZIA Student Design Awards runner-up
construction 24-unit co-housing development innewtown.
She sayswellness is ‘‘one of the major things we think about with all our houses’’.
At the development, all apartmentswill have a dual aspect, meaning they open to two sides. This is good for crossventilation, as well as giving more feeling of openness and space in small scale living.
Because the idea of building community is inherent in the cohousing concept, the design accentuates this, Robertson says.
While the apartments are selfcontained – eachwith its own kitchen, bathroom and living areas – memberswill also have access to shared facilities: a common house, guest bedroom, rooftop, storage, laundry, workshop, garden and decks.
Robertson says research shows resilience and community is built by ‘‘lots of low level, nonpressured interactions’’.
‘‘So bumping into people on the stairs or just seeing them in the garden – these are the things that build the trust you need.’’
Understanding this, the architect’s plan is to make the stairs a ‘‘social and special place’’ instead of a dark and cold thoroughfare.
The complex will house about 100 peoplewhen complete.
She says the shared workshop will allow for creativity and will be ‘‘good for cost-effectiveness as people will be able to do things like build their own furniture’’.