Post by account_disabled on Mar 11, 2024 4:10:32 GMT -5
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), we spend 90% of our lives indoors, where air quality is two to five times more polluted than outdoors, for example.
And, contrary to what you may think, beauty and functionality are not synonymous with health and well-being. “You have to work on what you can't see,” defends Marta Ribas, designer and health consultant in interior spaces. The specialist considers that our buildings and homes are not designed for us to spend so many hours inside them, much less to protect us. “They are so far from our natural needs that we don't even see the direct relationships that exist between many of our diseases and the spaces we inhabit ," she explains in an interview with idealista / new.
After studying at the Escola Superior de Design e Cambodia Telegram Number Data Engenharia (Elisava) in Barcelona, Marta Ribas began working in window dressing and interior design , designing experiential spaces/installations in the world of fashion and perfumery for big brands such as Levi Strauss, Diesel, Prada, Valentino, Carolina Herrera and Comme des Garçons. At the same time, she combined her work with different studies and habitat sciences.
The twenty years he dedicated to commercial spaces, "so linked to human behavior and its sensory impact", were for him a "laboratory of exploration and learning", but also a starting point for what would become ' The Mother House', a project that aims to promote a healthy wellness revolution at home . He has created his own method of diagnosing spaces that allows us to create healthy living and working environments, based on the union of different disciplines from the world of design, construction, comprehensive health and human behavior.
“I tirelessly seek to create new forms of design that are not only functional and aesthetically attractive, but also consider the relationship of the human being with nature and the built environment to promote health, comfort and human well-being from a more real place,” Explain .
In this interview written for idealista/news, the Spanish specialist, who also works in the Portuguese market, delves into the concept of holistic design and its importance in the construction of healthy homes and buildings; He explains what multisensory spaces are and how they relate to our well-being and health; and why we increasingly need to “create environments that heal us.
And, contrary to what you may think, beauty and functionality are not synonymous with health and well-being. “You have to work on what you can't see,” defends Marta Ribas, designer and health consultant in interior spaces. The specialist considers that our buildings and homes are not designed for us to spend so many hours inside them, much less to protect us. “They are so far from our natural needs that we don't even see the direct relationships that exist between many of our diseases and the spaces we inhabit ," she explains in an interview with idealista / new.
After studying at the Escola Superior de Design e Cambodia Telegram Number Data Engenharia (Elisava) in Barcelona, Marta Ribas began working in window dressing and interior design , designing experiential spaces/installations in the world of fashion and perfumery for big brands such as Levi Strauss, Diesel, Prada, Valentino, Carolina Herrera and Comme des Garçons. At the same time, she combined her work with different studies and habitat sciences.
The twenty years he dedicated to commercial spaces, "so linked to human behavior and its sensory impact", were for him a "laboratory of exploration and learning", but also a starting point for what would become ' The Mother House', a project that aims to promote a healthy wellness revolution at home . He has created his own method of diagnosing spaces that allows us to create healthy living and working environments, based on the union of different disciplines from the world of design, construction, comprehensive health and human behavior.
“I tirelessly seek to create new forms of design that are not only functional and aesthetically attractive, but also consider the relationship of the human being with nature and the built environment to promote health, comfort and human well-being from a more real place,” Explain .
In this interview written for idealista/news, the Spanish specialist, who also works in the Portuguese market, delves into the concept of holistic design and its importance in the construction of healthy homes and buildings; He explains what multisensory spaces are and how they relate to our well-being and health; and why we increasingly need to “create environments that heal us.