Because of their inevitable sticker
shock, I like to work with the basics and select products
that look fabulous while addressing facilities' durability
and maintenance concerns.
To avoid the "cutesy-pie" homespun styling
often applied to soften the harshness of the institutional
setting, I look to hospitality products for a variety
of styles. I agree with Cynthia Leibrock ("Let's
Stop Tweaking a Flawed Model," Nursing Homes/Long
Term Care Management, June 2004, p. 38) that it is
imperative to maintain a professional atmosphere within
the nursing home or assisted living facility. When
you look at the architecture of many long-term care
facilities today, the common-area spaces tend to be
much larger than anyone's home spaces, making homey
decorations look ridiculous. So, in selecting finishes
and furniture, I continue to look at the tried-and-true
products that have proven themselves over time, and
believe their passage through my creative mind produces
an updated spin.
Style-wise in general, we have moved from the 1960s
to the 1970s, which is progress in the sense that
it allows for more variety and motifinfluences from
around the globe. Today's updated colors are cantaloupe
orange, clear aqua, rich tasty browns, sage green,
and turmeric red. Other updated aspects of long-term
care design include:
Finishes. In particular, Crypton[R] fabrics (as used
by Robert Allen Design) have blessed us with more
and more colors and patterns to choose from.
Furnishings. The Arts and Crafts style, exemplified
by American of Martinsville's Homestead, works well
in long-term care settings. When I designed an assisted
living facility in this style in 2000, there was nothing
available for the healthcare market. Now there is.
Floorcoverings. Hospitality carpets, such as those
produced by Milliken Carpets, are very popular. They
come in a variety of beautifully developed patterns
and can inspire an entire interior design scheme.
They are effectively used in corridors with complementary
patterns for adjoining rooms.
Wallcoverings. I still look to vinyl wallcovering
(for example, Source One Exclusive from Eykon) and
borders for a lot of "design information"
(the confirmation of my interior design style and
additional "artwork" when the budget doesn't
allow for accessorizing). Goat-hair wall carpet (from
Eurotex) for the dado--while heavy in the visual aesthetics--is
excellent for sound absorption and provides a feeling
of intimacy, while withstanding a lot of bumping and
scraping. (And, yes, it is fire-rated for vertical
applications.)
Lighting Fixtures. For corridors I am specifying
Metalux's Aerial for the even, direct light it provides
without creating glare. This is a surface-mounted
fluorescent light fixture that is low-profile (an
attribute that is very hard to find in lighting fixtures).
Special Items. (A) "Little chairs for little
people." To encourage the grandchildren to visit,
I placed a child's rocking chair in a facility sitting
room, hoping that they would look forward to sitting
in their own "special chair." (B) Real art.
Coming from an artistic heritage, I always try to
place real art in a facility. And, yes, it is often
refused. A few years back, though, I was lucky with
the lobby of an assisted living facility. I commissioned
the ceramicist Paul Chaleff to make one of his soothing
water fountains as a focal point. |