Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Expressing Individuality through Polyvalent Interior Architecture

View through CrossRef
<p><b>What interior architecture qualities and strategies enable first year students in university halls of residence to express their individuality as a means to maintain personal wellbeing?</b></p> <p>The aim of this research is to enable students in their first years of independent living to temporarily express their individuality within temporary pre-existing multi-occupancy accommodation. Through a variety of design research methodologies, this thesis will produce a design proposal that can be used as a precedent for future student accommodation. It will demonstrate successful interior architecture strategies and qualities that have been developed to fit the specific environment of student accommodation and culture.</p> <p>Overall, research showed student housing in Wellington is in need of improvement in order to have better impact on their well-being. The interior architecture of student accommodation in Wellington, provided by universities and private entities, lacks flexibility around personalization and providing common spaces that impact well-being. The lack of flexibility with the interior qualities limits how students can express their individuality in their temporary accommodation. Additionally, the repetitive interiors make it difficult for students to create a sense of individuality. In this context, temporary accommodation is defined as living environments close to university campuses that students occupy for relatively short time periods. This research elucidates the students’ belief that common spaces and facilities offered in their accommodation will have a great impact on their well-being and experience in the halls of residence. Its findings conclude that common spaces in student accommodation have the same impact to their well-being as their bedrooms. Furthermore, and most importantly for the study findings is that adaptable, flexible and polyvalent architecture are helpful strategies to design by in order to enable personalization, a positive living experience and healthy culture for students.</p>
Victoria University of Wellington Library
Title: Expressing Individuality through Polyvalent Interior Architecture
Description:
<p><b>What interior architecture qualities and strategies enable first year students in university halls of residence to express their individuality as a means to maintain personal wellbeing?</b></p> <p>The aim of this research is to enable students in their first years of independent living to temporarily express their individuality within temporary pre-existing multi-occupancy accommodation.
Through a variety of design research methodologies, this thesis will produce a design proposal that can be used as a precedent for future student accommodation.
It will demonstrate successful interior architecture strategies and qualities that have been developed to fit the specific environment of student accommodation and culture.
</p> <p>Overall, research showed student housing in Wellington is in need of improvement in order to have better impact on their well-being.
The interior architecture of student accommodation in Wellington, provided by universities and private entities, lacks flexibility around personalization and providing common spaces that impact well-being.
The lack of flexibility with the interior qualities limits how students can express their individuality in their temporary accommodation.
Additionally, the repetitive interiors make it difficult for students to create a sense of individuality.
In this context, temporary accommodation is defined as living environments close to university campuses that students occupy for relatively short time periods.
This research elucidates the students’ belief that common spaces and facilities offered in their accommodation will have a great impact on their well-being and experience in the halls of residence.
Its findings conclude that common spaces in student accommodation have the same impact to their well-being as their bedrooms.
Furthermore, and most importantly for the study findings is that adaptable, flexible and polyvalent architecture are helpful strategies to design by in order to enable personalization, a positive living experience and healthy culture for students.
</p>.

Related Results

The architecture of differences
The architecture of differences
Following in the footsteps of the protagonists of the Italian architectural debate is a mark of culture and proactivity. The synthesis deriving from the artistic-humanistic factors...
Conceptualizing Pre-Modern and Modern Individuality. Some Theoretical Considerations
Conceptualizing Pre-Modern and Modern Individuality. Some Theoretical Considerations
The paper distinguishes two types of individuality: in the pre-modern era,people conceptualised their individuality by constructing themselves aplace in society. The suggestion mad...
Social innovation : understanding selected Durban-based interior designers' perceptions of socially responsible interior design
Social innovation : understanding selected Durban-based interior designers' perceptions of socially responsible interior design
In a world with pressing social issues that require the collaboration of multiple stakeholders to solve them, this research sought to find out through the views of interior design ...
‘We are fireworks’: Anarcho-punk, positive punk and democratic individuality
‘We are fireworks’: Anarcho-punk, positive punk and democratic individuality
This article explores the tensions within and around anarcho-punk concerning individuality and individualism by drawing on George Kateb’s discussion of the normative ideal of ‘demo...
Lessons in Diversity: Origins of Interior Decoration Education in the United States, 1870–1930
Lessons in Diversity: Origins of Interior Decoration Education in the United States, 1870–1930
During the last quarter of the nineteenth century, many factors, such as greater emphasis on the importance of the home and its decoration, contributed to the separation of interio...
Architecture between heteronomy and self-generation
Architecture between heteronomy and self-generation
Introduction «I have never worked in the technocratic exaltation, solving a constructive problem and that’s it. I’ve always tried to interpret the space of human life» (Vitto...
Mikhailovskii, Nikolai Konstantinovich (1842–1904)
Mikhailovskii, Nikolai Konstantinovich (1842–1904)
Along with Lavrov, N.K. Mikhailovskii, a non-academic social theorist and literary critic, was the most representative and influential thinker of Russian populism. His most distinc...
Screening of Feed Components for Salmonella with Polyvalent H. Agglutination
Screening of Feed Components for Salmonella with Polyvalent H. Agglutination
The application of polyvalent H serology for screening certain feed components for Salmonella was evaluated. In a comparative study of 1,894 suspicious or k...

Back to Top