MURFREESBORO — What
are the best ways to design health care facilities for recovering military
veterans?
The MTSU Student Chapter of the American Society of Interior
Designers and the Department of Human Sciences will tackle that subject in their
2015 lecture series at 6 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 15, in Maney Hall at Oaklands
Historic House Museum, 900 N. Maney Ave. in Murfreesboro. The event is free and
open to the public.
“Department of Veterans Affairs: Interior Design Impacts the
Human Experience through Measurable Design Strategies” is the presentation’s
theme. The federal agency is assessing its facility needs along with such
factors as construction and maintenance costs, affordable care, staff
recruitment and patient safety.
One of the featured speakers, Teresa Tillman, is interior
designer and medical equipment manager for the U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs’ medical center in Birmingham, Alabama.
For more than 10 years, Tillman had a similar position at
the Tuscaloosa, Alabama, V.A. center, where she transformed the campus to
include hospice care, a women’s veterans unit and a skilled nursing care
cottage.
“We feel like we are on the cusp of something new here, and
this is a perfect model, where the focus is on the veteran and not the staff,”
Tillman said of the cottage in the Winter 2012 edition of “Tuscaloosa V.A. All
Star News.”
Another speaker, AnnMarie Jackson, is director of interior
design for the firm of Sherlock, Smith & Adams. She was a part of the
community living center design team in Tuscaloosa and also worked on a facility
for homeless veterans in Ft. McPherson, Georgia.
Jackson’s work emphasizes evidence-based design practices
focusing on the design environment’s impact on the human experience. She
recently served on the ASID national board of directors.
ASID is the oldest, largest and leading professional
organization for interior designers with more than 24,000 members.
A reception will precede the lectures at 5 p.m. in Maney
Hall. For more information, contact Deborah Belcher, chair of the MTSU
Department of Human Sciences, at 615-898-2302, or deborah.belcher@mtsu.edu, or
Oaklands Historic House Museum at 615-893-0022.
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