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Interior, Human, and Wellbeing : the Continued Reciprocal Interaction Between Interior and Its Inhabitants Facilitates Human Wellbeing in Home Environment

dc.contributor.advisorEbert, Carola
dc.contributor.advisorSerdar-Köknar, Burcu
dc.contributor.authorPhương Ngọc Hoàng
dc.contributor.departmentFaculty of Architecture and Design
dc.contributor.otherBerlin International University of Applied Sciences
dc.date.accessioned2024-01-15
dc.date.accessioned2025-12-02T10:34:57Z
dc.date.available2025-12-02T10:34:57Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.description.abstractAI-GENERATED ABSTRACT: Abstract This Master's Thesis investigates the coexistence of material (space) and immaterial (mind) aspects of a personal domestic environment, emphasizing the crucial role of the user in the design process in order to develop an interior in the home environment that archives both subjective and objective human wellbeing. With the increasing inevitability of changing living spaces, the support of interior professionals becomes crucial in helping migrants find satisfaction and adapt to their new environments with a healthy mind. The integration of theories from other disciplines, such as philosophy and psychology, into the research and practice the field of interior (architecture), is essential to discovering new methods to solve current challenges in people's everyday living environments. Furthermore, Master's Thesis Project serves as a demonstration of utilizing theoretical research to translate into practical design solutions, particularly in the realm of interior projects that focus on user subjective wellbeing while addressing current design challenges, including cultural misunderstanding, limited professional workforce, and financial barriers. Keywords: interior architecture, wellbeing, co-design, user centric, interiority, domestic interior, home environment, routine, migrants, modified interior, personalized interioren
dc.description.degreeMA
dc.description.tableofcontentsMACHINE-GENERATED CONTENTS NOTE: Table of Contents 1. Introduction 5 2. Interior and Human 7 2.1. Interiority - Interior Language of Mind the Concept of a Private Self-taught Language 7 the Comprehension of Interior 9 2.2. the Construction of Domestic Interior - Space the Immateriality - Interior Design: Occupation and Their Activities 11 the Materiality - Interior Decoration: Everyday Objects 12 the Temporality - Interior Architecture: the Passage of Time 13 3. Interior and Home 15 3.1. Happiness Inside the House - a Sense of Home 15 Case Study 1 - Tokens of (un)belonging: Domestic Objects and the Sense of Home Among Women Transmigrants in Belgrade (brujić 2023) 18 3.2. Routine - the Balance of Mind 21 3.3. the Spatial Paradox - Breaking the Sense of Home and the Everyday Routine 22 3.4. the Spatial Negotiation Between Dweller and Designed Interior Case Study 2 - Social Housing as Paradoxical Space: Migrant Women's Spatial Tactics Inside Toki Uzundere Blocks (eranil Und Gürel 2022) 25 4. Interior and Wellbeing 30 4.1. Design for Wellbeing 30 4.2. Co-design in Interior 31 Case Study 3 - the Effects of Different Types of Student Involvement in Dormitory Design Over Time (d. Becker 1980) 32 4.3. Ma Thesis Project the Explanation of Ma Thesis Project - 'positive' - Interior (architecture) 35 Architecture Site Information 36 Design Demonstration 36 Design Experiment 49 5. Conclusion 52 6. Bibliography 53 list of Figures 57en
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.berlin-international.de/handle/123456789/1058
dc.language.isoeng
dc.subjectCo-Design
dc.subjectDomestic Interior
dc.subjectHome Environment
dc.subjectInteriority
dc.subjectModified Interior
dc.subjectPersonalized Interior
dc.subjectRoutine
dc.subjectUser Centric
dc.subjectWellbeing
dc.subjectInterior Architecture
dc.titleInterior, Human, and Wellbeing : the Continued Reciprocal Interaction Between Interior and Its Inhabitants Facilitates Human Wellbeing in Home Environment
dc.typeThesis

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