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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Thornbury Family Dental in Melbourne, Australia by Laxstudios

 
October 29th, 2018 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Laxstudios

A critique, the project redefines the perception and experience of the conventional dental office that is born out of necessity yet habitually associated with fear, anxiety, phobia and pain.

Barrier to a dental visit has often exacerbated by the negative perception of the ‘unknown’; the obscurity and overly clinical environment that is heightened by the abrupt exposure of needles, drills and bibs.

The project dared to be different, with methodology adopted from to the systematic desensitization used in dentistry; as a procedural method in reducing a patients’ anxiety through a gradual exposure of dental procedure, presented architecturally.

Image Courtesy © Laxstudios

  • Architects: Laxstudios
  • Project: Thornbury Family Dental
  • Location: Melbourne, Australia

Image Courtesy © Laxstudios

Small tenancy lot, the design challenges are both to be in-different yet restrained to a conventional dental office in spatial configuration, dental procedural and technical requirements.

Treating the dental treatment as a gradual exposures of activities and spaces, the dental clinic tributes to a relax and humane environment that is similar to a walk in a park.

Concepts and ideas are drawn from external references to detach the built-form from its predictability.

The curved forms throughout the dental office’s ceiling are strategically shaped from screening overhead services while subtly forming spaces. As guiding mechanism that coherently dialogue with the occupants’ movement and the exploration of spaces.

A sense of transition is introduced at the main entry by an overly arched ceiling form to emphasize its significance as a buffer zone from the hustle and bustle of the street-level traffic. The continuation is followed by a series of succeeding smaller curvatures in rhythm to a patient’s movement.

Image Courtesy © Laxstudios

Image Courtesy © Laxstudios

The purposely lowered reception table are shaped to foster a more engaged conversation between the nurse and patient where a treatment plan is discussed prior convoy to one of the treatment pod.

Placement of the planter box and its vertical plants along the ramp are treated as a subtle compensation to the level indifference yet enables an opening dialogue in a form of visual engagement between the incoming patient and dentist.

Intended to encapsulate of both the dentist and patient, the glass pods are purposely shaped in circular forms. The in-between spaces created enable the opportunity to interweaving ancillary spaces while its transparency enables natural light penetration throughout.

Behind the glass pods are layers of retractable curtains that offer the acousticity to the interior yet creating a backdrop to the dental activities from within.

A story board that is vaguely narrating and hinted; a “tell-show-do” physiological method enabling the reduction of anticipatory anxiety of those awaits, by curating readiness.

Image Courtesy © Laxstudios

Image Courtesy © Laxstudios

Image Courtesy © Laxstudios

Image Courtesy © Laxstudios

Image Courtesy © Laxstudios

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Categories: Dental office, Interiors




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