The Environmental and Human Dimension of the Ikigai Philosophy for Healthy Housing | ||||
International Design Journal | ||||
Article 5, Volume 15, Issue 2 - Serial Number 66, March and April 2025, Page 43-50 PDF (307.09 K) | ||||
Document Type: Original Article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/idj.2024.335799.1215 | ||||
![]() | ||||
Authors | ||||
aya kamal sakr ![]() | ||||
1Higher Institute of Applied Arts, Fifth Settlement | ||||
2الجامعة المصرية الصينية بالقاهرة | ||||
3Interior design and Furniture, Faculty of Applied Arts, Helwan University | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Abstract: Interest in ecosystems and nature has become an important element of interior design, which is a basic necessity in human societies to improve physical and mental health, productivity and well-being. Designing residential units that do not satisfy users' social, recreational and behavioral needs has negative effects on these individuals. Interior design plays a fundamental role in treating the phenomenon of sick residential building syndrome and human interaction with the space in which they exist in its three aspects: intellectual, material and psychological, which is what the Ikigai philosophy calls for, a Japanese philosophy that calls for a reason to live so that the individual has a goal in life that makes it stress-free and happy. The Ikigai philosophy aims to better understand space as a result of a passion in the person himself to achieve the best in his life, increase productivity and reduce mental stress while taking into account the economic, functional and human dimensions. Ikigai also helps designers to design well and optimally functionally and aesthetically (form and content), encouraging the designer to think from the perspective of the user's needs and design the space accordingly. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
Ikigai design; environmental design; healthy housing design; human design; healthy housing interior design | ||||
Supplementary Files
|
||||
References | ||||
1) Browing,D. Rayan,O., and Clancy,O.(2014). 14 Patterns of Biophilic Design, pp9-10
2) Héctor,G & Francesc,M .(2017),IKIGaI:The Japanese secret to along and happy life, Penguin Books, pp 12-17
3) Jason,F.Mclennan,A.(2004)The philosophy of sustainable design, the future of architecture,Ecotone Publishing, pp54
4) Kellert,S.R.,Hearwagen,J.,&Modor,M.(2008).Biophilic Design.pp176-177
Researches
1) Angen, Courtney,(2013): Concept and Technique: How Traditional Japanese Architecture can contribute to Contemporary Sustainable Design Practices, Environmental Studies Honors Papers, Paper 10, p37
2) Crawford, R. (2023): The Global Influence on Interior Design and the Impact on a Family and Consumer Sciences Professional, Research, Northwest Missouri State University, p(2-7)
3) Elbatrawy,S, Samra,M.(2022): Enhancing Personal Identity for Interiors via Biometrics, Mansoura Engineering Journal, (V)47, (I)3, p(41-42)
4) Kharitonov,A. Smirnova,O.Vilenskii,M(2019): Principles of green architecture for the historical part of Saint-Petersburg, Journal: Urbanism. Arhitectură. Construcţii, No2, p(103-112)
5) Kotera,Y, Kaluzeviciute,G, Garip, G, McEwan, K & Katy, J. (Sep 2021): Health Benefits of Ikigai chapter1, Journal CDSP, pp1
6) Lyubomirsky, S., Sheldon, K. & Schkade, D. (2005). Pursuing happiness: The architecture of sustainable change, Review of General Psychology, 9(2), pp111-131
7) Petermans, A, Pohlmeyer, A(2014): Design for subjective well-being in interior architecture, Research, Proceedings of the 6th Annual Architectural, pp2
8)Trzebiński, J., Cabański, M., & Czarnecka, J. Z. (2020). Reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic: The influence of meaning in life. Journal of Loss and Trauma, 25(6–7), 544–557 | ||||
Statistics Article View: 115 PDF Download: 59 |
||||