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Ch. 3 The Human Impact of Interior Design, Review and Assess Summary -…
Ch. 3
The Human Impact of Interior Design
Human Impact: Social and Environmental Responsibility
LEED Certification--Commercial and Residential
LEED Credit Categories
Main Credit Categories
LEED for Cities and LEED for Communities Credit Categories
NAHB-- Residential and Multi-Family
Socially Responsible Design
Sustainable and Green Design
Avoid Waste
Design Smarter
Use Influence
Specify Sustainable Materials
Sustainable/Green Resources
Net Zero Energy
Consider Adaptive Reuse
Living Building Challenge
Focus on Wellness and Well-Being
Proxemics
Theories Impacting Human Behavior
Theories of Place
Sense-of-Place Theory
Sense-of-self Theory
the selection of objects and symbols to communicate personal identity to others
Third Place Theory
Stimulation Theory
the environment as a source of sensory information gathered through sight, sound, touch, taste, and smell
Privacy and Privacy Theory
Control Theory
the sense of control a person desires over his or her world and specifically, the physical environment
Behavioral
the ability to change an environmental event
cognitive
the ability to change how you think of an environment
Decisional
the ability to choose your own actions, behavior, and response to an environment
Importance of Privacy
Behavior-Setting Theory
social events or public places in which people use routine, and often repeated, actions within a given time and place
Privacy and Stress
Environmental Psychology Theories
predict emotional and physical reactions to environmental stimuli and characteristics
Fun Theory
Changning human behavior for the better by making a tedious task fun to do
Crowding and Density
Designing for Human Comfort
Ergonomics
Privacy Regulation Theory and Territoriality
Anthropometrics
Better Design for All
Inclusive Design
Universal Design
Design for Aging-in-Place
Designer Math Skills
Using Anthropometrics in Preschool Restroom Design
Toddler-Preschool Restroom Guidelines
Review and Assess Summary
Theories on human behavior help designers explain how people perceive a space and behave within it.
Privacy is a major contributor to a sense of control in people's environments.
Designing for human comfort involves understanding how to position people in relation to others and the relationship of human body measurements to a volume of space.
Knowledge of anthropometrics, ergonomics, and proxemics helps designers create spaces that meet human comfort needs.
Interior designers scale interior spaces and arrange furnishings to meet proportions of users or clients.
Designers develop spaces that provide safety and comfort to others.
Socially responsible design considers the needs of future generations through preserving environmental resources, conserving energy, and using sustainable resources and materials.
Socially responsible design involves avoiding waste, designing smarter, and exerting influence with clients and team members.
USGBC, NAHB, ASID, and the EPA offer certifications and resources designers can use for socially responsible design.
The WELL Building Standard™ (WELL™) is a performanced-based rating system for evaluating and certfiying building features that impact health and well-being.
Designing for all people is a social and environmental responsibility of interior designers.
Universal design, inclusive design, and designing for aging-in-place offer strategies to produce designs with proper functional features and aesthetics to meet the needs of specific populations and all people.