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A Place of Wellbeing in Architecture: A Mental Health Museum

Life is meant to be lived with happiness and joy, but what happens when you don't feel as if you're living, and your life feels worthless and filled with sadness? When your daily routine is disrupted? When things go left instead of right?
The mental state of many individuals has progressively worsened over the past few years. There are many reasons for this. One being the overwhelming use of mobile devices and living within a digital world which has isolated us from people and communities.
This thesis addresses the lack of human interaction and community support through the design of a mental health museum. The project creates a place whose program provides spaces that support wellbeing while designing a museum that explores the issues and history of mental health. The museum provides these spaces that focus on the journey towards a state of well being. While not instantaneous, the journey within the museum is both physical and psychological. The journey within the museum is experienced through a series of ramps that flow through the building, acting as a transition from one exhibit space to the other. The ramps allow the visitors to slowly move between galleries, providing time to walk and, perhaps, reflect and understand the contents of the exhibits, as well as to benefit the visitors in other ways. One of the overarching goals for the museum was to create a safe space or spaces for those who visit. As well as a journey that becomes one of mindfulness and consists of learning, reflecting, engaging, and decompressing from the stress of living in today's world. The thesis and museum addresses four ideas:
Learning through exhibits and talks hosted in the lecture hall or resources within the bookstore.
Reflecting while traveling to the next gallery space, or on the rooftop garden.
Engaging in wellness areas through interactive displays, galleries, or use of a wellness room.
Decompressing within the planted areas and green spaces intertwined with the museum's journey and the adjacent woodland with its walking trail to the nearby community garden.
This thesis opens up a conversation about mental health through the design of the museum to spark the topic as a positive, encouraging and natural subject of discussion. / Master of Architecture / The mental state of many individuals has progressively worsened over the past few years. This thesis addresses the lack of human interaction and community support through the design of a mental health museum.

When it comes to mental illness, from the start of symptoms and receiving treatment there is an average 11 year gap. The stigma about mental illness and mental health can be seen as a cause for this delay. Everyone is affected by mental health in one way or another. Specifically communities of low-income. The resources for mental health in these neighborhoods are low. Which is why the museum is located in Washington, D.C. across the Anacostia River in Ward 8; one of two of the poorest wards in DC. The St. Elizabeths Hospital East Campus, located in ward 8, is in the process of being redeveloped. In redevelopment is my addition of a mental health museum that contains spaces for learning, reflecting, engaging, and decompressing.

This thesis opens up a conversation about mental health through the design of the museum to spark the topic as a positive, encouraging and natural subject of discussion. The project is designed to create spaces for connecting with others who have found themselves wanting to learn about the history of mental health as well as view artwork created about mental health.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/116163
Date29 August 2023
CreatorsYoung, India
ContributorsArchitecture, Feuerstein, Marcia F., Piedmont-Palladino, Susan C., Green, Tuwanda Lee
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
FormatETD, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

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