Title |
A Study on the Holistic Spatial Design Elements for Service User Experiences in Healthcare Facilities |
Authors |
전수경(Chun, Sookyung) ; 남경숙(Nam, Kyung-Sook) |
DOI |
http://dx.doi.org/10.14774/JKIID.2015.24.4.003 |
Keywords |
User Experience Design ; Service User Experience ; Healthcare Service Environment ; Affordance ; Service User Experience Design Elements |
Abstract |
For last decades, the interests and efforts to enhance healthcare facility users’ experience is focused on improving facility environments for healing (Delvin, 2003) and servicescapes in order to meet the users’ needs (Becker, 2008; Seunghee, 2011). In the emerging experience economy, customer want experiences and they’re willing to pay for the experiences and memories not goods. (Pine, J. & Gillmore, J., 1999). It is important to identify what supports customer experiences and how they perceive the experiences in healthcare environments and it will provide important information for healthcare planners, managers, architects, and interior designers. This study examines the service user experience design elements from a User Experiences design perspective. It focuses on healthcare facilities as user experience elements and build up a conceptual framework that outlines service user experience design elements in healthcare facilities. Literature review and case studies were conducted to build the service user experience design elements according to affordance theory. Findings from this study shows that service user experience design elements were introduced and newly developed which can be categorized into three factors; 1) Functional experiences in the physical environments (safety, accessibility, self-directiveness), 2) emotional expression and cognitive experiences (identifiability/clarity, natural features/pleasant environment, aesthetic elements/playful space, media richness), 3) social relational experiences(closeness, privacy, communication with staff, integrated system). These service user experience design elements will help healthcare facility designers to understand what customer experiences, how they increase the satisfaction, and how they improve facilities for modeling the industry’s best practices. |