30 min

20, Part 2, Tama Duffy Day Healthcare Interior Design 2.0

    • Design

In the second half of Cheryl’s conversation today with Tama Duffy Day, Health & Wellness Leader at Gensler Architecture, Tama offers insight into her two-year position as podcast host on Gensler’s popular podcast, Design Exchange. Tama’s gives her advice to other design firms about whether or not to start their own podcast. She shares, “Being a podcast host gives you an opportunity to allow someone else’s voice to be heard.” Tama shares her insight on this and more on the changing face of healthcare design and its potential to impact health and wellness, globally.
Tama Duffy Day is a global author, lecturer, and speaker. She and her team at Gensler have received more than 50 awards and honors for their work, and for three consecutive years Tama was named one of the “Most Influential People in Healthcare Design” by Healthcare Design magazine. Tama is one of the few design professionals inducted as a fellow into the American College of Healthcare Executives. Learn more about Tama Duffy Day and Gensler Architecture by visiting https://www.gensler.com/. Send your questions to Tama an email to: Tama_DuffyDay@gensler.com.
This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Learn more about Porcelanosa by visiting https://www.porcelanosa.com/.
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We’ve all seen some variation of this:
Somebody’s kid sibling gets into their parent’s closet and emerges, clothed in a dress or trousers that are 3 feet too long, trailing on the floor behind them.
It’s cute as all get-out, right?
It’s the end of 2019, and as healthcare thinking and design moves away from a one-size-fits-all, institutional mindset, towards a more personalized, individualized care model, you are looking for ways to move away from one-size-fits-all thinking in your hospital, healthcare & senior living projects.
Here’s a great example from one of our podcast guests, Sara Parsons with Gallun Snow Associates.  Sara shares, “Different patient populations need different art and graphics. A still life of fruit will not comfort a surgery patient checking in on an empty stomach and a mountain stream may be uncomfortable for an ultrasound patient arriving as instructed with a full bladder.”
Art Addiction understands your unique challenges when it comes to selecting the very best artwork for your project. They offer a library of over 15,000 unique, gorgeous images, an in-house studio that can produce everything from small-scale yet durable and cleanable prints to mural-sized acrylic wall installations and their design support team is superb. Start exploring now by visiting https://www.artaddictioninc.com/.
Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners:
The Center For Health Design The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how the Center for Health Design can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org.
Connect to a community interested in supporting clinician involvement in design and construction of the built environment by visiting The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design at https://www.nursingihd.com/.
In part two of Cheryl’s conversation with Tama Duffy Day, you will learn:
How healthcare is different today than it was 10 years ago, and what this means for designers of today. How new technology for healthcare is oftentimes like having a personal wellness coach. How vulnerability plays a role in healthcare design and why it matters to your career. What is generative space and how does it help healthcare professionals design better spaces? The story of how Tama fell into healthcare design and why it stuck. The concept of Gensler’s Boomtown and what the research has revealed about intergenerational living in thoughtful and meaningful ways. The answer to the question, “What country is the first to have ‘gone gray’-- the country where there are more older people than younger population groups?” The

In the second half of Cheryl’s conversation today with Tama Duffy Day, Health & Wellness Leader at Gensler Architecture, Tama offers insight into her two-year position as podcast host on Gensler’s popular podcast, Design Exchange. Tama’s gives her advice to other design firms about whether or not to start their own podcast. She shares, “Being a podcast host gives you an opportunity to allow someone else’s voice to be heard.” Tama shares her insight on this and more on the changing face of healthcare design and its potential to impact health and wellness, globally.
Tama Duffy Day is a global author, lecturer, and speaker. She and her team at Gensler have received more than 50 awards and honors for their work, and for three consecutive years Tama was named one of the “Most Influential People in Healthcare Design” by Healthcare Design magazine. Tama is one of the few design professionals inducted as a fellow into the American College of Healthcare Executives. Learn more about Tama Duffy Day and Gensler Architecture by visiting https://www.gensler.com/. Send your questions to Tama an email to: Tama_DuffyDay@gensler.com.
This podcast is brought to you by the award-winning Porcelanosa—a global innovator in tile, kitchen and bath products. Learn more about Porcelanosa by visiting https://www.porcelanosa.com/.
----
We’ve all seen some variation of this:
Somebody’s kid sibling gets into their parent’s closet and emerges, clothed in a dress or trousers that are 3 feet too long, trailing on the floor behind them.
It’s cute as all get-out, right?
It’s the end of 2019, and as healthcare thinking and design moves away from a one-size-fits-all, institutional mindset, towards a more personalized, individualized care model, you are looking for ways to move away from one-size-fits-all thinking in your hospital, healthcare & senior living projects.
Here’s a great example from one of our podcast guests, Sara Parsons with Gallun Snow Associates.  Sara shares, “Different patient populations need different art and graphics. A still life of fruit will not comfort a surgery patient checking in on an empty stomach and a mountain stream may be uncomfortable for an ultrasound patient arriving as instructed with a full bladder.”
Art Addiction understands your unique challenges when it comes to selecting the very best artwork for your project. They offer a library of over 15,000 unique, gorgeous images, an in-house studio that can produce everything from small-scale yet durable and cleanable prints to mural-sized acrylic wall installations and their design support team is superb. Start exploring now by visiting https://www.artaddictioninc.com/.
Additional support for this podcast comes from our industry partners:
The Center For Health Design The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design Learn more about how the Center for Health Design can support your firm by visiting: http://healthdesign.org.
Connect to a community interested in supporting clinician involvement in design and construction of the built environment by visiting The Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design at https://www.nursingihd.com/.
In part two of Cheryl’s conversation with Tama Duffy Day, you will learn:
How healthcare is different today than it was 10 years ago, and what this means for designers of today. How new technology for healthcare is oftentimes like having a personal wellness coach. How vulnerability plays a role in healthcare design and why it matters to your career. What is generative space and how does it help healthcare professionals design better spaces? The story of how Tama fell into healthcare design and why it stuck. The concept of Gensler’s Boomtown and what the research has revealed about intergenerational living in thoughtful and meaningful ways. The answer to the question, “What country is the first to have ‘gone gray’-- the country where there are more older people than younger population groups?” The

30 min