World Happiness Week: Designing for Urban Connection
Partnering with Social Health Lab’s founder, Kasley Killam, MPH from Harvard University, to discuss Designing for Urban Connection as a part of the World Happiness Week events, hosted by Togetherness Hub!
Pandemic-Resilient Healthcare Design
HKS Health and Arup have partnered to share The Pandemic-Resilient Hospital: How Design Can Help Facilities Stay Operational and Safe. In this webinar, we explored detailed architectural, MEP engineering and medical planning strategies to create and adapt facilities to be more resilient to long-range airborne diseases, such as SARS-CoV-2.
An Impromptu Discussion: Architecture and Design Exchange
“done without being planned, organized, or rehearsed.”
In a new series of one on one talks, An Impromptu Discussion aims to re-instill the desire for spontaneous and critical discussion around architecture and design. An Impromptu Discussion will be held every two weeks, hosted by Michael Friebele in partnership with the Architecture and Design Exchange. In the spirit of being “impromptu,” there will be no prepared slides. Each session will cover a number of topics and interests with audience participation in shaping the discussion encouraged.
Erin Peavey Named Building Design & Construction 40 Under 40
Erin Peavey is Named a BD+C 40 under 40 class of 2020
These AEC stars are making their mark in business, philanthropy, and in their communities.
Cornell Keynote: Institute for Healthy Futures - Health and Human Connection
The pandemic has created a new normal of remote living: forcing many of us to move from in-person interactions to online and virtual experiences, heightening feelings of loneliness, disengagement and disproportionately affecting vulnerable and marginalized communities.
Join this event on utilizing health, hospitality and design to reframe human connection, share our humanity, promote inclusion.
Erin Peavey Named an Engineering News Record 2021 Top Young Professional
Erin Peavey was honored to be recognized by ENR Texas & Louisiana at part of the 2021 class of Top Young Professionals. This annual awards program honors 20 individuals under 40 years of age in each of ENR's 10 regions who have shown exceptional leadership and service throughout their career.
National Forum for Black Public Administrators: Forum 2020
Loneliness can affect anyone at any point in life and is a topic that employers should address proactively as it can have a negative effect on workplace productivity and a person’s health. The workplace can serve as the foundation for improving vitality and reducing feelings of loneliness and starts by creating a culture of inclusion.
Speaking at International City Management Association Conference
Loneliness can affect anyone at any point in life and is a topic that employers should address proactively as it can have a negative effect on workplace productivity and a person’s health. The workplace can serve as the foundation for improving vitality and reducing feelings of loneliness and starts by creating a culture of inclusion. But how do you do this in a time of social distancing? Managers and leaders of organizations can lead the way by building connections with their employees and setting a cultural tone of relationship-building and inclusiveness both in the office and virtually. Join us to learn what steps you can take to combat loneliness in your workplace and improve your employees’ health, well-being and productivity. Erin Peavey of HKS Architects will discuss how the built environment is an essential tool in creating a world that is more connected, comforting, and well. By working together with the communities we serve, we can co-create places that foster health.
Cooper Hewitt: Design On The Front Lines
Designing on the Front Lines (DOTFL) is a series of online conversations organized by the Health Design Lab at Jefferson University School of Medicine with Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum. Twelve live sessions were recorded during Summer 2020, as Covid-19 spread to cities and rural areas around the United States and the world. In each episode, doctors, nurses, designers, architects, and other professionals discuss design as a weapon against Covid-19. Topics discussed include designing medical devices and PPE; addressing racism’s role in the pandemic; redesigning patient rooms and emergency departments; and creating new rituals for death and grieving. Delivered via Zoom, the conversations are moderated by Dr. Morgan Hutchinson and Dr. Matthew Fields, emergency physicians and faculty in the Health Design Lab.
Quoted in Curbed on Design to Combat Loneliness
“The nation’s leaders and policymakers are currently focused on combating the coronavirus as well as devising policies to ease the impact of an expected recession. But there’s also a coming social recession that deserves more attention right now, according to Erin Peavey, a Dallas-based architect and design researcher for HKS focused on designing for health and human connection.”
After Social Distancing, This Dallas Architect Is Hoping For A 'Renaissance Of Connection'
“As Peavey and her family adjust to social distancing, their front porch has become a gateway for connection. Peavey, a licensed architect and vice president at the Dallas-based firm HKS, recently published a report around this idea, looking at how the built environment can shape social well-being.”
SXSW 2020: The Antidote to Loneliness
In a time of hyper connection and communication, many of us report feeling lonely and detached, and there is strong evidence that this has a toxic effect on our health and happiness. This panel will discuss what’s driving increases in social isolation and loneliness (hint: it’s not just technology) and examine scalable strategies — some unexpected — that lead to social environments that promote meaningful connections. The trick is to think not only about places where communities are formed IRL, but the people who gather there and the shared experiences that keep them coming back. Huge opportunities await entrepreneurs who can leverage this knowledge to build a future marked by connections that boost our collective health.