Sergison Bates has completed its first elderly care home at Huise-Zingem
AT Is there a conflict between the idea of home and institutional scale
Stephen Bates One of the most positive factors of a care home as opposed to staying at home is the potential it has to address the scariest part of getting old – increasing isolation
But while it is efficient to put all of the care facilities required locally in the same place
you end up with a big building; the challenge is how to make that domestic
we talked a lot about the feeling of a household
That led us to look for a way of organising the programme by grouping a number of collectives comprising residents who require a particular type or level of care
We found an answer in the courtyard typology: the building comprises three parts which are shifted in relation to one another
Two of those have courtyards and the central one has a large living room
Around these spaces are groups of between eight and ten rooms
There’s a lot of encouragement by the industry to think like that
but the architectural challenge is how to do it well: if you have a wall with eight or ten doors it looks like an institution
In recent projects we have developed devices to reduce the number of visible doors by grouping them in recesses
We spent a lot of time sizing the courtyards as the clients’ existing building had one that was too high and narrow
We developed a stepped section to let in the maximum amount of light
Though it feels like a big building when you arrive – some have linked it to a country house – once you’re inside you’re constantly connected to the outside through large windows
either into a courtyard or out to landscape views
are low in relation to the size of the large living rooms
they give the interiors a proportion that relates to the flat landscape
AT How do practical and regulatory requirements complicate matters
There is a requirement to have fully-accessible ceilings
smooth floors that allow beds and chairs to be rolled and so on
I think there are still too many ingredients that say ‘institution’
In our current elderly care projects in Belgium we are working to reduce that
AT Were you conscious that the visual or tactile qualities of rooms might be particularly important to people who are not very mobile
SB The staff encourage as much movement as possible
but one of the lessons we’ve learned over the last eight years is that residents do not move around the building as much as you might expect: in most cases they don’t leave their floor
and many don’t leave their corner of it – the household
They move between the bedroom and the living room and some can only manage to move between the bed and the chair within the room
We were able to achieve greater room sizes than the regulatory minimum
which is 25 square metres for a bedroom and bathroom
and they are tall spaces with large windows
We used curtains and lighting that you would associate with a domestic environment
and encouraged the client to consider the opportunities for residents to bring in their own furniture
As a point of orientation and to give a sense of identity
our graphic designer created a glass-fronted box next to the door of each room in which personal belongings and pictures are placed
That is supplemented by a pinboard within the fixed furniture that provides a ready-made backdrop to inhabitation
We also worked with artists Ana Araujo and Willem de Bruijn on textile design
From seventeenth-century tapestries depicting domestic scenes they developed a wallpaper pattern and curtains that change from room to room
Elderly people are no less sophisticated than anyone else
so there’s no need to use brash colours – something that bugs me in buildings for children too
In general we were careful in thinking about colours because sight loss and dementia are major factors
If you watch elderly people stepping from a light material to a dark material
you often see them hesitate because they perceive the dark area as a void
we learnt that orange is thought to be frightening for people with dementia
Subtle details can be very important in this sort of building
AT Does it help that many residents have a long familiarity with modern architecture
SB Belgian society embraced modernism in ways that we didn’t in Britain
but there is also a love of old things – the brick tradition is as old as the fourteenth century and still part of the culture
As architects we are making connections with historic tradition as well acknowledging an acceptance of modernism
If architecture is going to play a significant role in the provision of care homes the the UK
it has got to position itself correctly within the culture – you can’t force elderly people into a modernist project if they don’t want it
We have to find an architectural language which makes deep connections
we based the the courtyards on one we measured in the old city of Ghent because we were interested in making inate or unconscious connections between the residents and the spaces – familiarity is not just about form
AT You have two further care home projects in Belgium and are looking at more in the UK
it’s a shock to realise how entrenched your ideas are about what is right
when we were trying to locate the best position for the communal living room
as architects we naturally thought it should be a light space
It was quickly explained why that would be wrong: staff can’t give constant attention and an immobile resident left by a south-facing window or balcony might burn
So the main living rooms are on the north side and have large windows onto a sunlit garden
Doing this project allowed us to develop a high level of sensitivity towards the programme
which is necessary because it is emotionally-laden: there are residents who don’t want to be associated with people with different needs
But we’re careful not to assume we know how to do it now – it’s important to approach each project for the particular problems that it has got to solve
© Built Environment and Architecture Media Ltd 2025
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