Designing Spiritual Places
Spiritual spaces are particularly challenging to design, but insight from research can be helpful.
Spiritual spaces are particularly challenging to design, but insight from research can be helpful.
Not all languages describe or discuss the physical environment in the same way.
Although multiple studies have shown that people speaking on mobile phones are not very attentive to their physical environments, prior investigations have often been conducted in somewhat unrealistic circumstances.
Porath and her colleagues have investigated situations in which customers see employees interact who are upset with each other, and the ramifications are dire.
Lenzholzer and van der Wulp investigated the ways that perceived temperature can be influenced in urban squares through spatial forms and materials.
New research indicates that possessing certain branded objects directly influences our perceptions of ourselves.
Susan Rodiek and her colleagues have developed an extraordinarily valuable tool for people creating outdoor spaces for the elderly.
There is mounting evidence that people with autism perceive the world differently than people without it.
Ann Devlin comprehensively reviews Americans’ relationships with the structures they build in What Americans Build and Why.
In their bestseller, Switch, Chip and Dan Heath profile ways in which place design can be used to mold behavior.