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Integrating sufficiency in a design process: trans-disciplinarity between Co-design and Performance simulation
by
Van Hees, J
, Declercq, J
, Vermeersch, PW
in
Co-design
2025
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Integrating sufficiency in a design process: trans-disciplinarity between Co-design and Performance simulation
by
Van Hees, J
, Declercq, J
, Vermeersch, PW
in
Co-design
2025
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Integrating sufficiency in a design process: trans-disciplinarity between Co-design and Performance simulation
Journal Article
Integrating sufficiency in a design process: trans-disciplinarity between Co-design and Performance simulation
2025
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Overview
Comfort performance standards often err on the side of caution, leading to higher building costs, excessive material use, and increased embodied carbon, while still adopting a reductionist view of occupant wellbeing. We developed a user centred simulation based co-design strategy to investigate how to incorporate comfort performance with the Self-Determination Theory of well-being through design. We make a thematic analysis of two case studies of office designs where this approach was tested. The initial results demonstrate how performance simulations—such as daylight—can be interpreted from an experiential, rather than purely normative, perspective. Rather than making immediate adjustments to the building’s technical concept, participants explored the qualities of different zones as represented in the simulations and imagined how these spaces could be used in various ways.
Publisher
IOP Publishing
Subject
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