Architecture of dread… or healing

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“Friday the 13th” – that’s what today is. It sounds so spooky and full of dread. It conjures up superstitious thoughts and nightmare-scenes from horror movies… so what to post about on such a (potentially) dark day?

An architecture of dread… or not.

While looking for images for my university research, I came across some photographs of derelict hospitals, orphanages and mental ‘health’ institutions. They were predictably terrifying. There is something very unsettling about a place of healing left to rot, looking so grim.

Possibly it’s an unfair analysis too, since “derelict in time” does not necessarily equate to “dereliction of duty”. Some of the spaces look like they were once colorful, light-filled and spacious… well intended, perhaps even well suited, for patient caring.

Perhaps the terror that they trigger in us has more to do with the stories that we have heard over time. Memories about early “treatment” methods for certain “ailments” (such as “hysteria” in women), make everything feel a bit cringey and morbid and make our minds go to dark places.

Whilst there are plenty of images to choose from online, here’s three – an abandoned mental asylum photographed by Matt Van der Velde in America, a tuberculosis ward in New York by Johnny Joo and Aaron Miller’s photo of a kindergarten in Chernobyl:

[Image source: These Images of Abandoned Insane Asylums Show Architecture That Was Designed to Heal | ArchDaily]

[Image source: Eerie pictures of Abandoned hospitals in the US – Mirror Online]

[(Witness to decay – the road to Chernobyl – Postcard Intellect (wordpress.com)]

A phrase that that came up in an associated article about these eerie pictures of rotting institutions, was “RUIN PORN”. What we feel when we look at the images, borders on a sublime-terror. These images of decline are so aesthetically evocative it’s hard to look away – but at whose expense are we getting our cheap thrills? Who suffered to make these images? Patients? Landlords? Society? The poor old building itself?

What efforts are we taking to reverse the decline? Or save further buildings from falling into similar decay? What broader moves are being made to make an architecture of healing that is more viable?

Potentially proving the point that we can be short-attentioned and selfish, I too turned my back on the doom and gloom once I had my fill and decided instead to indulge in a newer form of recreational looky-see: “AI-IMAGE GENERATION”.

I asked three different AI art makers to portray the same prompt: “a hospital room designed for holistic healing” – this is what I got:

It is interesting that the three images share several aspects: a neutral color palette, lots of plants, natural lighting, open space, and a shift away from “typical” hospital furniture towards furniture you might see in a hotel…

…the fruit basket and over the top wall decorations of the middle picture are particularly nice touches (no matter how impractical they might be)…

… the two white statues of blob-people in the window of the same (second) image are slightly more unnerving… as is the number of chairs for visitors.

They did make me wonder though:

…who waters all the pot-plants?…

…what would happen if you were a patient with hay fever?…

…how important is a room with a view if you are healing – and does it matter whether the view is a landscape or cityscape?…

…having read the book Healing with Color, I wonder if the beige-on-beige with green accents is as healing as they think…

…what happens on an overcast or rainy day when a bland room loses its light?

Out of curiosity – what do you think of the computer’s approach to holistic healing? What elements do you think contribute to an architecture that heals?

On this Friday the 13, take care taking care…

…in your own space of healing, Linda xox

PS – just as I was about to hit “publish”, I remembered there was one more AI website I had recently been experimenting with, so I jumped over to give it the same prompt. It went all out on the sunshine and greenery, but this time there’s a person included… a well deserving health care worker who gets to heal!


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15 responses to “Architecture of dread… or healing”

  1. Muganza Bill Avatar

    Very Insighful….. Great work.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Thank you! 🌞

      Like

  2. John Micallef Avatar

    Love this one! 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      Why thank you Sir! 🥰

      Like

  3. Content Catnip Avatar

    These are all interesting and provocative questions and such a great post!

    AI tends to polarise people. It tends to regurgitate all of the sum and total of human creativity and in my opinion it does a soulless rendition of what a human can make.

    I like your observation about the functionality and aesthetics of hospital spaces. I’ve been getting a lot into interior design lately and imagining how my home would eventually look exciting me. Hospitals are really utilitarian spaces and a bit soulless I’ve never felt comfortable in them, what about you?

    These abandoned mental hospitals look eerie and spooky…the kind of places that would give you a shiver if you were there in person. Do you believe in ghosts?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      I do believe in ghosts… not always and not everywhere… but definitely. I think hospitals would be full of them. I think the AI images are curious but not very functional- imagine having to water all those plants!! 🌱

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Content Catnip Avatar

        Me too…I believe in them similarly but not all the time and not everwhere as well.

        Liked by 1 person

  4. Skyseeker/nebeskitragac Avatar

    Insane asylums from the past can be truly disturbing, especially if you know how people were treated back then. While this last AI picture is beautiful!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      The last one is fun – but imagine watering all those pots!! 🌱🌱🌱

      Liked by 1 person

  5. joannerambling Avatar

    What wonderful post it made me think of the Ghost shows Tim and I watch, Ghost Adventures & Ghost Asylum to name two but there are others we watch also.

    Old hospitals and asylums are dark and gloomy and creepy places and I believe they are haunted. So much that went on in them way back when, was not nice and often cruel and criminal by todays standards. They were not places of healing but often just somewhere to hide someone the family found an embarrassment.

    The AI generated images do look good but maybe not that practical, the plants would need to be artificial due to allergies and to me they are too far from a hospital like setting, the last photo with all the plants would give me the creeps

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      🤣that last image freaked me out too – the plants were taking over the room… you could almost feel their leafy-fingers touching you as you tried to sleep! (and yes, I think the ghosts would be in those rotting rooms for sure!)

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  6. sedge808 Avatar

    Abandoned-Porn is a thing.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      No comment.

      Liked by 1 person

  7. cindy knoke Avatar

    Wow. Love the AI images.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Mindful Migraine Blog Avatar

      They’re a little bit repetitive (I think they’re all pulling from the same source material) but it is curious to see what the computer thinks!

      Like

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