Hospitals Call Wayfinding Experts in Earlier to Increase Efficiency, Improve Experience
Four new projects for Michigan firm reflect growing recognition of wayfinding's importance in facility design
Corbin News Release
February 3, 2003
Traverse City, MI – Corbin,
an environmental graphic design firm based in Traverse City, has begun
working with four medical centers in three states in recent months, as
medical facility planners increasingly turn to wayfinding experts to
help develop more patient-friendly places.
In two cases, Corbin's role goes beyond simply
developing a signage system and extends to giving input into architectural
details and campus traffic patterns for new facilities. This expanded
role reflects the growing realization among medical facility planners
and administrators that wayfinding—the ability to determine your
location in an environment and reach your destination—depends
on a lot more than signs, and that everything from the number of one-way
streets on a medical campus to the placement of elevator lobbies in a
building affects how easily people can navigate a campus or facility.
"We're working more closely with architects
to create environments that respond with a heightened sensitivity to
patients' needs," said Jeff Corbin, the firm's president.
At Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, the wayfinding challenges are a result
of the sheer size of the 86-acre downtown campus, the more than 100 buildings
that make up the medical center, and their congested urban location.
Corbin was called in after the medical center had solicited several proposals
from architectural firms that didn't fix the problem.
"The interconnected buildings and recent addition
of parking decks have contributed to an impression of over 4 million
square feet of confusion," said Hilda Haithcock, the medical center's
director of interior design services and planning. "We need a wayfinding
system and plan, not just signage. I was very impressed with Corbin's
philosophy of wayfinding."
Corbin's work at Wake Forest University Baptist
Medical Center involves improving interior and exterior wayfinding by
analyzing traffic patterns and destination names, and recommending the
introduction of architectural landmarks to help patients, visitors and
staff navigate the campus. In particular, Corbin's designers and
information architects will review how public entrances are designated,
how floors are labeled, and how people make the transition from parking
garages to buildings. A new $75 million cancer center and a parking structure
will also be analyzed from a wayfinding perspective.
Corbin is also working 150 miles away at Asheville,
North Carolina's Mission St. Joseph's Health System. There
Corbin has been hired to design new exterior and interior wayfinding
programs for the medical center, which is the result of a recent merger
between Mission Hospital and St. Joseph's Hospital, Asheville's
two large private acute care hospitals. Corbin is also involved in efforts
to rename the two hospitals and their departments to make them seem more
unified, and to facilitate post-merger marketing efforts.
Licensed for more than 800 beds, Mission St. Joseph's
Health System is a regional referral center for the western quarter of
North Carolina and portions of several adjoining states.
At Northwestern Memorial Hospital in downtown Chicago,
Corbin has been hired to perform a wayfinding analysis and provide recommendations
to the hospital for wayfinding in the new Prentice Women's Hospital.
Working with VOA Associates and OWP/P Architects, Chicago's largest
architecture/engineering firm, Corbin's role goes beyond traditional
environmental graphic design to taking part in decisions on building
site issues and road circulation patterns.
The $200 million, 117-bed Prentice Women's Hospital
is being built in response to continued growth in patient volume at Northwestern;
the original 25-year-old facility that it will replace is already the
largest birthing center in Illinois, having seen more than 8,000 deliveries
in 2001.
Further west, Corbin recently began working with Saint
Alphonsus Regional Medical Center in Boise, Idaho. Corbin is partnering
with HDR Inc., a global architectural and engineering firm, to help develop
a circulation plan for the campus including the introduction of traffic
roundabouts to improve traffic flow. Saint Alphonsus serves over half
a million people, and is the region's leading trauma center.
Since its founding in 1976, Corbin has completed hundreds
of projects for health care, educational, governmental and corporate
clients across the country. The firm's expanding scope of project
types includes signage and wayfinding, interactive systems and websites,
identity systems and print communications—all based on the philosophy
that "access equals success." A partial list of Corbin's
wayfinding clients includes University Health Network in Toronto, Penn
State University, the cities of Los Angeles, Milwaukee and Atlanta, Herman
Miller in Zeeland, Michigan and Recreational Equipment Inc. (REI) in
Seattle. Additional information about the firm can be found online at
www.corbindesign.com.
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