Architects’ professional perspectives on child- and family-friendly apartment design in Australia

In recent decades, increasing numbers of families with children are living in apartments in Australian cities; negotiating family life in dwellings not designed for their specific needs. This paper describes indirect participatory design research, involving architects and researchers acting as inter...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Richard Tucker, Fiona Andrews, Louise Johnson, Jasmine Palmer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2022-11-01
Series:Journal of Asian Architecture and Building Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13467581.2021.1972813
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846166766327169024
author Richard Tucker
Fiona Andrews
Louise Johnson
Jasmine Palmer
author_facet Richard Tucker
Fiona Andrews
Louise Johnson
Jasmine Palmer
author_sort Richard Tucker
collection DOAJ
description In recent decades, increasing numbers of families with children are living in apartments in Australian cities; negotiating family life in dwellings not designed for their specific needs. This paper describes indirect participatory design research, involving architects and researchers acting as intermediates of end users, identifying how architects see that apartment design guidelines could be reconciled with the needs of families with children. Architects in Victoria, Australia, participated in a design workshop that elicited their views on child and family needs elucidated by research with families, explored Australian and international apartment design guidelines in relation to families, and which asked in light of this evidence – what needs to change in design guidelines to inform family-friendly apartment designs? Findings reveal important similarities and critical differences between architects’ and users’ views on apartment design for families with children. The paper concludes by discussing how these differences might be reconciled to ensure future apartment designs that suit a more diverse mix of households, including families with children. The challenges are also highlighted of using indirect participatory design when direct participatory design is not possible, including sacrificing the design consensus arising from architects and end users working together.
format Article
id doaj-art-96ed2acc28e64c8fa3a75b559f34ed0d
institution Kabale University
issn 1347-2852
language English
publishDate 2022-11-01
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
record_format Article
series Journal of Asian Architecture and Building Engineering
spelling doaj-art-96ed2acc28e64c8fa3a75b559f34ed0d2024-11-15T10:36:00ZengTaylor & Francis GroupJournal of Asian Architecture and Building Engineering1347-28522022-11-012162262227610.1080/13467581.2021.19728131972813Architects’ professional perspectives on child- and family-friendly apartment design in AustraliaRichard Tucker0Fiona Andrews1Louise Johnson2Jasmine Palmer3Deakin UniversityDeakin UniversityDeakin UniversityRMIT University | RMIT · School of Property, Construction and Project ManagementIn recent decades, increasing numbers of families with children are living in apartments in Australian cities; negotiating family life in dwellings not designed for their specific needs. This paper describes indirect participatory design research, involving architects and researchers acting as intermediates of end users, identifying how architects see that apartment design guidelines could be reconciled with the needs of families with children. Architects in Victoria, Australia, participated in a design workshop that elicited their views on child and family needs elucidated by research with families, explored Australian and international apartment design guidelines in relation to families, and which asked in light of this evidence – what needs to change in design guidelines to inform family-friendly apartment designs? Findings reveal important similarities and critical differences between architects’ and users’ views on apartment design for families with children. The paper concludes by discussing how these differences might be reconciled to ensure future apartment designs that suit a more diverse mix of households, including families with children. The challenges are also highlighted of using indirect participatory design when direct participatory design is not possible, including sacrificing the design consensus arising from architects and end users working together.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13467581.2021.1972813child and family-friendly apartment designapartment designchildrenfamiliesaustralia
spellingShingle Richard Tucker
Fiona Andrews
Louise Johnson
Jasmine Palmer
Architects’ professional perspectives on child- and family-friendly apartment design in Australia
Journal of Asian Architecture and Building Engineering
child and family-friendly apartment design
apartment design
children
families
australia
title Architects’ professional perspectives on child- and family-friendly apartment design in Australia
title_full Architects’ professional perspectives on child- and family-friendly apartment design in Australia
title_fullStr Architects’ professional perspectives on child- and family-friendly apartment design in Australia
title_full_unstemmed Architects’ professional perspectives on child- and family-friendly apartment design in Australia
title_short Architects’ professional perspectives on child- and family-friendly apartment design in Australia
title_sort architects professional perspectives on child and family friendly apartment design in australia
topic child and family-friendly apartment design
apartment design
children
families
australia
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13467581.2021.1972813
work_keys_str_mv AT richardtucker architectsprofessionalperspectivesonchildandfamilyfriendlyapartmentdesigninaustralia
AT fionaandrews architectsprofessionalperspectivesonchildandfamilyfriendlyapartmentdesigninaustralia
AT louisejohnson architectsprofessionalperspectivesonchildandfamilyfriendlyapartmentdesigninaustralia
AT jasminepalmer architectsprofessionalperspectivesonchildandfamilyfriendlyapartmentdesigninaustralia