Wayfinding at new Parkland Memorial Hospital made simple
Signs, symbols, technology help patients, visitors navigate easily
There’s no question the new 2.1 million-square-foot Parkland Memorial Hospital is super-sized. Nearly twice as large as the current Parkland, Dallas County’s new public hospital is the largest hospital construction project in the U.S.
Despite its jumbo scale, the new Parkland was designed to make it easy for patients and visitors to find their way. Simple visual clues and user-friendly technology, along with more than 30,000 signs, will help patients and visitors get to their destination.
“Hospitals can be stressful environments,” said Gena English, AAHID, EDAC, RAS, Senior Program Manager of New Parkland Construction. “One of the important design goals we included from the beginning was ease of navigation. We wanted to make it as easy as possible for patients and their families to find their way, whether it’s to the cafeteria, labor and delivery or to visit a sick loved one.”
From the first step when visitors enter the new hospital, wayfinding clues abound. Five interactive touch-screen computer displays opposite the front doors greet guests as they approach the front desk. The information screens offer assistance in both English and Spanish, the predominant languages spoken by Parkland visitors.
The screens also use symbols and images to guide the user through a menu of options to help them find their way. Programmed like many familiar cell-phone apps, they provide simple verbal and visual directions and maps to the desired destination. Because they are paperless, the lobby screens also eliminate litter.
“The information screens will be intuitive for most people to use and will provide a quick way to find assistance,” said Joseph Longo, Vice President, New Parkland Hospital Information Technology. “If additional help is needed, front desk staff will be there to answer questions.”
Signage throughout the new hospital includes universal symbols based on a program called “Hablamos Juntos,” meaning “we speak together.” Symbols identify everything from restrooms to Gift Shop, Imaging Services to Pastoral Care. Parkland’s design team developed the majority of the icons used throughout the building to meet the hospital’s unique needs.
“Currently, there are 110 different languages spoken by patients and visitors at Parkland,” said English. “The icons provide a non-verbal, visual ‘alphabet’ to help guide people, regardless of their language.”
Colors are another subtle but important route-finding feature. From the main lobby, visitors have only two choices of elevators to take them to patient floors above – the gold elevators that lead to the Serena Simmons Connelly Tower, home to Women and Infants Specialty Health (WISH) services, or the blue elevators that provide access to the acute care tower housing medical and surgical patients.
“Blue and gold were selected for the walls and signs at the elevators because they are two colors that even color-blind individuals can perceive,” English explained.
In addition, two shapes of leaves embedded in the lobby’s terrazzo flooring provide more wayfinding queues. Oak leaves lead toward the gold elevators, while bald cypress leaves guide guests to the blue elevators.
With 870 private patient rooms, the room-numbering system at the new Parkland also needed to be simple. The first digits represent the floor number, followed by a hyphen and room numbers. For example, 12-402 represents room 402 on the 12th floor. Signs greet visitors as they exit the elevators on each floor, providing additional directions to rooms and services.
A special wayfinding system was incorporated into the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). In keeping with the mission of ‘bringing the park back to Parkland’ and to enhance the healing aspects of nature found throughout the new hospital, the 96 private patient rooms in the NICU are grouped into “Lake” and “Forest” zones. There are eight “pods” of 12 rooms each in the NICU; hallways and rooms are clustered by fish, frog, dragonfly and duck symbols in the Lake section, and by bear, bird, deer and rabbit symbols in the Forest area.
“Natural materials, colors and natural light reflect the unifying theme of nature throughout the hospital,” English said. “Wherever people look, there are windows, bringing the outdoors in and providing another way that people can orient themselves by seeing a view.”
For more information about the new Parkland, please visit www.parklandhospital.com
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