ease

A personal experience of working in an uncomfortable workspace has stimulated me to work on this Final Year Project. With office jobs becoming more dependent on technology, there is often a lack of warmth and comfort in workspaces. This uncomfortable experience has led to the curiosity on how worksp...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chong, Evelyn Li Ping
Other Authors: Chalit Kongsuwan
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/68514
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author Chong, Evelyn Li Ping
author2 Chalit Kongsuwan
author_facet Chalit Kongsuwan
Chong, Evelyn Li Ping
author_sort Chong, Evelyn Li Ping
collection NTU
description A personal experience of working in an uncomfortable workspace has stimulated me to work on this Final Year Project. With office jobs becoming more dependent on technology, there is often a lack of warmth and comfort in workspaces. This uncomfortable experience has led to the curiosity on how workspace environments are able to influence our comfort levels physically and psychologically. Existing methodologies on creating a sense of ease in spaces include Feng Shui and Biophilic Design. These methods were referenced as they both make use of natural elements as remedies. With material, form and movement being some of the key points that affects our comfort, works by conventional craftsmen such as George Nakashima and Tapio Wirkkala were analysed. The purpose of this report is to explore problems in confined workspace environments that can affect our physical and psychological comfort levels, as well as the different existing methodologies in comforting white-collared workers. Through the study of different material meanings and our senses, a better understanding on how humans perceive comfort is achieved. From the research done, it is also understood that natural materials, organic forms, and movement are influential in generating a sense of comfort. The final design outcome, ease, is a range of desk objects inspired by the olive-backed sunbird that is native to Singapore, as well as the kinetic movement of roly-poly. The work is intended to suggest comfort in cubicles where the space is limited and inert.
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spelling ntu-10356/685142019-12-10T14:56:29Z ease Chong, Evelyn Li Ping Chalit Kongsuwan School of Art, Design and Media DRNTU::Visual arts and music A personal experience of working in an uncomfortable workspace has stimulated me to work on this Final Year Project. With office jobs becoming more dependent on technology, there is often a lack of warmth and comfort in workspaces. This uncomfortable experience has led to the curiosity on how workspace environments are able to influence our comfort levels physically and psychologically. Existing methodologies on creating a sense of ease in spaces include Feng Shui and Biophilic Design. These methods were referenced as they both make use of natural elements as remedies. With material, form and movement being some of the key points that affects our comfort, works by conventional craftsmen such as George Nakashima and Tapio Wirkkala were analysed. The purpose of this report is to explore problems in confined workspace environments that can affect our physical and psychological comfort levels, as well as the different existing methodologies in comforting white-collared workers. Through the study of different material meanings and our senses, a better understanding on how humans perceive comfort is achieved. From the research done, it is also understood that natural materials, organic forms, and movement are influential in generating a sense of comfort. The final design outcome, ease, is a range of desk objects inspired by the olive-backed sunbird that is native to Singapore, as well as the kinetic movement of roly-poly. The work is intended to suggest comfort in cubicles where the space is limited and inert. Bachelor of Fine Arts 2016-05-26T07:09:32Z 2016-05-26T07:09:32Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/68514 en Nanyang Technological University 49 p. application/pdf
spellingShingle DRNTU::Visual arts and music
Chong, Evelyn Li Ping
ease
title ease
title_full ease
title_fullStr ease
title_full_unstemmed ease
title_short ease
title_sort ease
topic DRNTU::Visual arts and music
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/68514
work_keys_str_mv AT chongevelynliping ease