Sensory Design in Architecture: What Are Its Core Principles

Sensory design in architecture considers all human experiences within a building, including sounds, textures, aromas, and flavors. Architects create environments fostering emotional connection, cognitive engagement, and well-being. Core principles prioritize immersive experiences, human comfort, emotional resonance, and cultural relevance of sensory stimuli. Here’s how architecture integrates the built and unbuilt environment to engage the senses.

Designer: Grant Associates, WilksonEyre

1. Sight

Visual components are pivotal in architectural planning. Incorporating light, color, shape, and texture can evoke distinct feelings and enrich spatial awareness. Architects manipulate visual elements like light, shadow, and contrasting hues to navigate occupants through environments and establish focal points. Our perception of space, light, color, and texture relies on our visual senses.

The Gardens by the Bay Sound and Light Show is a mesmerizing multimedia event at Gardens by the Bay in Singapore. The Supertrees, iconic vertical gardens, dazzle with synchronized lights and music, creating an immersive experience. These Supertrees also feature integrated solar panels, enhancing their futuristic design as they illuminate the night sky during the show.

Image courtesy of: duallogic

Check out the aerial view of the rockery backyard garden that immerses you in a tactile experience, where lush greens contrast against a backdrop of textured rocky terrain.

2. Sound

Sound greatly influences our perception of space. Architects carefully consider acoustics to create environments suitable for different activities. Whether it’s using sound-absorbing materials in libraries or incorporating natural sounds outdoors, the goal is to enhance the auditory experience and establish harmony. Elements like water features, wind chimes, or musical instruments contribute to a soundscape that enriches the atmosphere.

Experience the mesmerizing Magic of Light through a VFX Projection Mapping Show on a building!

Image courtesy of: YouraPechkin

The presence of sound in a water fountain not only creates delight but also adds a sensory dimension, while visually enhancing the relaxing vibe it offers.

In high winds, the wind chime’s music harmonizes with the natural sounds of the wind, resulting in a captivating sensory experience. Whether placed in gardens or at entrances, these chimes emit sweet, melodic notes that enhance the ambiance.

3. Touch

The tactile aspect of architecture involves the physical interaction between people and their surroundings. Architects select materials based on their texture, temperature, and tactile qualities to create immersive environments. Whether it’s marble’s sleekness or wood’s warmth, each surface contributes to the overall tactile experience. Architectural design can also engage the sense of touch through textures, inviting individuals to interact with surfaces. Material selection can influence the temperature and atmosphere, offering comfort or stimulation. Well-designed elements like gloss finish tiles or travertine stone finish on walls pleasant tactile experiences, enhancing the overall impression of a space.

Designer: Shneel Malik

Indus is a tile-based, modular bioreactor wall system designed by architect Shneel Malik to address water pollution in India’s artisan and textile industry. Inspired by leaf architecture, the system utilizes algae in a symbiotic relationship to extract pollutants from wastewater through bioremediation. Locally fabricated using traditional methods and materials, Indus empowers rural artisan communities to regenerate water for reuse in their manufacturing processes. Compact and naturalistic, it offers a sustainable solution to water pollution, recognized internationally for its innovative design.

Image courtesy of: wirestock

The rough, coarse walls evoke a sense of ruggedness and solidity, offering both tactile and visual stimulation. The variety of colors, patterns, and textures in the stones creates an intriguing environment, enriched further by the play of light and shadow on the uneven surface.

Designer: Gessi

The Jacqueline tap by Gessi is a sensory masterpiece for your bathroom. Crafted from bamboo as part of the Gessi Spa Collection, it offers a blend of sustainability and elegance. Meticulously shaped using hot bending techniques, the bamboo roots provide a tactile and visually appealing experience. This tap not only adds style but also engages the senses with its attention to detail and eco-friendly design.

4. Smell

Smell, often underestimated in architecture, greatly influences a space’s atmosphere. Natural materials and greenery can bring in subtle scents, linking to nature and providing refreshment. Strategically placed essential oils or aromatic plants can establish a calming or invigorating environment. Architects can incorporate natural ventilation, fragrant plants, and scented materials to enhance the design’s sensory aspects. Whether it’s the aroma of baked goods in a bakery, the scent of wet earth after rain, or the woody fragrance of a forest, smells enrich the ambiance.

Image courtesy of: monkeybusiness

Scents quickly imprint in our memory, offering relaxation or therapy like lavender’s calm or jasmine’s stimulation.

Image courtesy of: vanitjan

The indoor landscape blends forest scents, including the aroma of rocks, moss, and trees, providing a sensory delight that engages the senses.

Designer: Hanyoung Lee

Elevate your indoor environment effortlessly with the compact Forest Scent Diffuser, infusing your space with the invigorating scent of the forest or the soothing aroma of the sea all day long. Inspired by the simplicity of a mailbox, this eco-friendly device utilizes tea bags or coffee scraps to emit your desired fragrance, promoting relaxation and focus wherever you place it in your home. Crafted from fabric and metal, its sleek design resembles a wireless speaker, discreetly enhancing your surroundings with the essence of nature while reducing stress and fatigue.

5. Taste

While taste isn’t commonly linked to architectural design, it can indirectly influence experiences, especially in restaurants and cafes. These spaces demonstrate how design can enhance culinary experiences by complementing the food with layout and aesthetics. Material choices also impact taste perception; for example, natural materials promote a more mindful connection with food. Architects in hospitality settings consider factors like dining area layout and food presentation to create a multisensory dining experience, where the smell of freshly brewed coffee further enhances the ambiance.

Image courtesy of: BlackBoxGuild

The aroma of freshly brewed coffee enhances the dining experience in cafes and restaurants, adding to the sensory delight of enjoying the space within the establishment.

6. Perception

Perception is pivotal, involving manipulation of space, height, color psychology, and light to shape interaction with surroundings. Architects use techniques like mirrors, patterns, and colors for optical illusions of space and depth. Strategic window placement and perforated screens regulate natural light, resulting in dynamic interplays of shadow, pattern, and light.

Image courtesy of: tampatra

Singapore’s Jewel Changi Airport offers a unique sensory experience, with its expansive skylight flooding the interior with natural light and creating a tranquil atmosphere. The centerpiece is the mesmerizing indoor waterfall, the Rain Vortex, which cascades down several stories amidst lush greenery, evoking wonder and awe. The scent of foliage fills the air, enhancing the immersive experience, while a silent train glides through the indoor forest, providing a unique perspective for travelers within this bustling terminal. Jewel Changi Airport is not just a transportation hub; it’s a destination where visitors can escape into a world of light, water, and nature.

Image courtesy of: Thaitoystory

Square cutouts allow natural light to enter, casting shadows on the floor. The patterns shift with the sun’s orientation, creating a spacious and dynamic atmosphere within the all-white space.

Image courtesy of: micheledeblock

Geometric patterns and shadows form an abstract design.

In architecture, sensory design seamlessly integrates all senses, engaging occupants holistically and nurturing their well-being while fostering a profound connection to the environment. By integrating sight, sound, touch, smell, and taste, architects create spaces that deeply resonate with occupants, fostering connection and enriching the overall human experience.

The post Sensory Design in Architecture: What Are Its Core Principles first appeared on Yanko Design.

Sensory Deprivation Skull Chair: My Evil Lair Demands It

You know, I was just thinking the other day; I would probably do much better thinking in a skull-shaped sensory deprivation chair. Of course, I didn’t do that thinking in a skull-shaped sensory deprivation chair (I was laying in the shower), so maybe it wasn’t my best thinking. Regardless, Dutch design studio Atelier Van Lieshout has created such a chair, consisting of a fiberglass skull with two front-closing doors and a fur-lined interior, perfect for pondering life and death.

The chair was made as a limited edition of ten manufactured back in 2007, so if you want to get your hands on one (and body inside), you’ll have to do some searching. I took a quick look around eBay with no luck, but I did just spend way more than I should have on comic books. I see now why my wife tried putting a parental block on the site, which I had to bypass using my phone’s cellular mode.

It kind of reminds me of Darth Vader’s meditation chamber. I imagine Vader did some really good thinking in there. Granted, he was not good enough to prevent the destruction of the first Death Star by a blatant design flaw, but he was Emperor Palpatine’s enforcer, not his chief engineer.

[via OddityMall]

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Vortx blows air at your face while you’re gaming and it’s great

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Get Scentimental

Cleverly called “Scentimental,” this diffuser tantalizes multiple senses- not just smell! By scenting the spinning top diffusers, users can release beautiful aromas as they spin across surfaces. Aromatic and mesmerizing, they’re a fresh, fun, interactive way to bring people together. Create olfactory-reinforced memories that can later be recalled by the same nostalgic scents for years to come!

Designer: Samuel Bond

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FEELREAL VR Mask and Helmet: A Face Full of Feeling

Modern movies and video games are amazing at delivering mind-blowing visuals and sounds. But a Brooklyn-based tech company’s invention would add a lot more senses to the experience.

FEELREAL’s Kickstarter campaign wants you to help them bring to market what they describe as “the world’s first multi-sensory virtual reality mask.” You could call it Smell-O-Vision for the 21st century.

feelreal_helmet_mask_1zoom in

The mask contain small motors and fans that create vibration, moisture, warmth, breeze and, yes, smells. The odoriferous component is probably the most interesting. The developers collaborated with perfumers who helped them design a series of removable cartridges that you can swap out to match the smells that would naturally emanate from whatever you are playing or watching.

feelreal_2zoom in

A pledge of at least $300 will get you an early consumer version of the mask, while $600 will buy you a version that integrates the mask with a smartphone-based VR display helmet, dubbed the NIRVANA.

feelreal_helmet_1zoom in

If they get it right, this technology could bring some amazing intensity to battlefield warfare play and flicks featuring delectable kitchen scenes. But the company may want to include a small towel with their device. In a video they produced of people trying out a prototype, the first thing a few did when they took off the mask was start trying to dry their faces off.

Superfy Your Senses

Introducing… the future! The Eidos concept consists of two experimental products that let you fine-tune your sight and hearing to experience visuals and sound like never before. Essentially, the devices enhance what our bodies already do and the applications are endless – athletes can use it to hone in on their physical technique, musicians can perfect their sound, or spectators can view live performances like ballet with previously invisible/inaudible details. Incroyable!

Eidos Audio lets us hear speech more selectively. It neutralizes distracting background noise and then amplifies the speech you choose. Unlike conventional headphones that have two channels, Eidos Audio has three: left, right, and a central mouth piece that uses the principle of bone conduction. This creates the unique experience of hearing someone speak right inside your head.

Eidos Vision enhances the way we see motion, achieving a similar effect to long exposure photography for live experience. By detecting and overlaying movement, it allows us to see traces and patterns hidden to the naked eye.

Designers: Tim Bouckley, Millie Clive-Smith, Mi Eun Kim, & Yuta Sugawara


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Sensory Maps Show Locations Along with Their Sights, Smells, and Sounds

Traditionally, maps were made to help people find their way around a city that they might be visiting for the first time. However, Kate McLean took the basic concept of the map and spun it around to come up with an all-new series that have made the jump from being reference materials to art: the Sensory Maps.

sensory map newportInstead of telling you where certain streets or landmarks are located, Kate’s sensory maps will instead let you know what it would feel like if you were actually there. How? By letting you smell its scents, taste the surrounding atmosphere, feel whatever might be there, and hear the sounds in that location.

Of course, it would be impossible to let you experience all these senses through a map – but that’s what your imagination is for, right?

sensor map smells

To construct some of the maps, Kate invited people to go to her studio and smell bottles with scents in them. She then had them recall what that scent remind them of and write down the place or feeling that they associated with the smell.

That’s a lot of work, considering that this is just for one of the senses that Kate’s trying to capture in her work.

[via Pop Up City]