Biophilic architecture for a healthy and productive workplace in the tropics

Biophillia, defined as the inborn pull of humans to nature, is an idea which has already been acknowledged by scientists and designers for the past several decades and subconsciously for thousands of years by humanity itself. In the workplace however, nature inclusive design has always been deemed a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Feng, Sie Reng Stephen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/81402/1/StephenFengSieMFAB2016.pdf
_version_ 1796863380372324352
author Feng, Sie Reng Stephen
author_facet Feng, Sie Reng Stephen
author_sort Feng, Sie Reng Stephen
collection ePrints
description Biophillia, defined as the inborn pull of humans to nature, is an idea which has already been acknowledged by scientists and designers for the past several decades and subconsciously for thousands of years by humanity itself. In the workplace however, nature inclusive design has always been deemed a luxury for bosses’ intent on creating the ideal employee workplace, or those who desire to show off their inclinations towards environmental responsibility. In the real world, biophillia can in fact improve work production and financial costing through the improvement of the community’s well-being. By inserting elements of our natural environment into the built environment, it is not just a luxury, but rather, a comprehensive asset in production and well-being, as proven by neurological and physiological research. In the research case studies presented, samples of minor investments concerning little to no up-front costs, for example, presenting staff access to plants, views towards the outdoors, natural daylighting and other biophilic design outlines. Based on these case studies, backed by scientific evidence, it is proven that the financial feasibility for the implementation of biophilic design in larger scale projects, be it in hospital settings where the healing processes in patients are accelerated, increased productivity in offices, improved test results in academic institutions, or increased sales in retail outlets, the research carried out proves the practicability for integrating biophilic design into out working and living spaces and in fact it is able to improve workplace wellness and productivity of the office users significantly.
first_indexed 2024-03-05T20:25:53Z
format Thesis
id utm.eprints-81402
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia - ePrints
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-05T20:25:53Z
publishDate 2016
record_format dspace
spelling utm.eprints-814022024-01-11T00:08:59Z http://eprints.utm.my/81402/ Biophilic architecture for a healthy and productive workplace in the tropics Feng, Sie Reng Stephen NA Architecture Biophillia, defined as the inborn pull of humans to nature, is an idea which has already been acknowledged by scientists and designers for the past several decades and subconsciously for thousands of years by humanity itself. In the workplace however, nature inclusive design has always been deemed a luxury for bosses’ intent on creating the ideal employee workplace, or those who desire to show off their inclinations towards environmental responsibility. In the real world, biophillia can in fact improve work production and financial costing through the improvement of the community’s well-being. By inserting elements of our natural environment into the built environment, it is not just a luxury, but rather, a comprehensive asset in production and well-being, as proven by neurological and physiological research. In the research case studies presented, samples of minor investments concerning little to no up-front costs, for example, presenting staff access to plants, views towards the outdoors, natural daylighting and other biophilic design outlines. Based on these case studies, backed by scientific evidence, it is proven that the financial feasibility for the implementation of biophilic design in larger scale projects, be it in hospital settings where the healing processes in patients are accelerated, increased productivity in offices, improved test results in academic institutions, or increased sales in retail outlets, the research carried out proves the practicability for integrating biophilic design into out working and living spaces and in fact it is able to improve workplace wellness and productivity of the office users significantly. 2016 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.utm.my/81402/1/StephenFengSieMFAB2016.pdf Feng, Sie Reng Stephen (2016) Biophilic architecture for a healthy and productive workplace in the tropics. Masters thesis, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia. http://dms.library.utm.my:8080/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:120374
spellingShingle NA Architecture
Feng, Sie Reng Stephen
Biophilic architecture for a healthy and productive workplace in the tropics
title Biophilic architecture for a healthy and productive workplace in the tropics
title_full Biophilic architecture for a healthy and productive workplace in the tropics
title_fullStr Biophilic architecture for a healthy and productive workplace in the tropics
title_full_unstemmed Biophilic architecture for a healthy and productive workplace in the tropics
title_short Biophilic architecture for a healthy and productive workplace in the tropics
title_sort biophilic architecture for a healthy and productive workplace in the tropics
topic NA Architecture
url http://eprints.utm.my/81402/1/StephenFengSieMFAB2016.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT fengsierengstephen biophilicarchitectureforahealthyandproductiveworkplaceinthetropics