Featured News
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National Geographic - How to design a city to improve your mental health - according to science
Discover how innovative urban design can boost mental well-being in cities. This featured article explores science-backed strategies for creating environments that support emotional health, from integrating nature to fostering social connection, and highlights the challenges and opportunities in building healthier urban spaces.
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Psychology Today - How to Design for Solitude
Find calm in a busy world. This featured article by Erin Peavey explores how thoughtful design can create spaces for true solitude-whether at home, in nature, or at work. Discover practical strategies and inspiring examples that show how architecture can nurture reflection, creativity, and well-being for everyone seeking a restorative pause from daily life1.
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Erin Peavey Honored as 2024 AIA Young Architect
Erin Peavey, AIA, has been honored with the 2024 AIA Young Architects Award, recognizing her national leadership in advancing design for health, well-being, and social connection. As an architect, author, and advocate, Erin bridges research and practice to create environments that help people thrive-from hospitals and schools to city neighborhoods. Her innovative work, mentorship, and public outreach are inspiring a new generation to see architecture as a catalyst for healing and community.
Combatting Workplace Loneliness
“There is a serious skills shortage in many countries, which has been part of the reason a lot of businesses have gone all in on offering employees flexibility. This raises an interesting question about where the duty of care lies in terms of employers being responsible for their employees’ wellbeing. Is an area you’ve looked into, and what are your thoughts are about how that dynamic is playing out?”…
How School Design Can Help Children Feel Safe
Children with adverse childhood events may have increased sensitivities and struggle to self-regulate.
Thoughtfully designed school environments can help children soothe themselves and cope with triggers.
Trauma-informed design can help all children—not just those who have undergone trauma.
NBC Texas Today: Ways to authentically connect with others
Author and architect, Erin Peavey, discusses ways to find a support system and combat feelings of loneliness.
BBC: Can Design Heal Loneliness?
Architect and researcher, Erin Peavey speaks to the BBC Woman’s Hour about how design of our built environment can help to foster social connection and heal loneliness.
Buildings That Can Heal in the Wake of Trauma
Practitioners of the emerging architectural movement called trauma-informed design see buildings as “the first line of therapy.”
Caring and Showing up for Others
“Something inside me still lights up when I think about how to use the built environment to love and care for people, not just my family, but for people I might never meet, and the people that care for them.”
America's broken housing market is making millennials and Gen Z lonelier
"We need to think beyond just the individual," Julianne Holt-Lunstad, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Brigham Young University and a leading loneliness researcher, told Insider. "We often neglect the built environment."
TEDx: Can Design Heal Loneliness?
On the TEDx stage, Erin shares research at HKS, Inc. on how design of public spaces has the power to combat loneliness is so important to the health of our communities.
To those in the design community, the small strokes you make when designing parks, architecture, or even simple sidewalks can heal us or hurt us.
Designing a Brain-Healthy Workplace
Our digital and physical workplaces can support or inhibit our brain health.
Our reliance on single office workstations can reduce our effectiveness and render us less active and adaptive.
Creating a range of spaces provides people choice, allowing them to fit their place of work for the type of work they are doing.
CBC’s Spark with Nora Young: Architecture for Well-being
"I think a lot of the beautiful traditional forms of architecture over the centuries, really, [have] responded to the natural environment of that area. And they responded to the people and their needs. And I think in so many different areas of life, right now, we're going back to understanding this wisdom that we used to have, that we sort of talked ourselves out of, and I hope that the built environment can be a part of that," said Peavey.
"It doesn't actually have to cost more, it just needs to be designed mindfully."
Keynote on How Architecture can Combat Loneliness - AIA Colorado
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. Peavey will share an evidence-based framework to design for social connection, examine scalable strategies — some unexpected — that lead to social environments that promote meaningful connections. Huge opportunities await architects who can leverage this knowledge to build a future marked by connections that boost our collective health.
John Oliver Features Project
John Oliver discusses environmental racism, how both government and industry are failing people of color, and pandas. Featuring the Floral Farms community, where Shingle Mountain once stood 6 stories high.
Fast Company World Changing Ideas!
Park for Floral Farms won honorable mention in the general excellence category of Fast Company’s World Changing Ideas Awards honors the broadest ideas, whether they’re new government policies, new business models, or entirely new consumer categories. Anything that has the potential to effect true systems change or solve wicked problems.
Well-Being & Mental Health by Design
How a shift in attitudes about mental health is changing not only how we design for well-being, but also the inner workings of the architecture field itself.
Bloomberg features environmental justice effort behind Park for Floral Farms
“What I feel, and what the community feels, is we should have as much justice and freedom, and breathe clean air, like the other areas of Dallas,” Jackson says. “The city isn’t taking lower-income brown and Black families and their health into consideration.”
How will the Floral Farms neighborhood heal after Shingle Mountain?
"Poisoned by Zip Code, Mended by Design" featured (from left) Miguel Perez, KERA arts reporter; Ari Brielle, artist; Marsha Jackson, activist and Floral Farms resident; Erin Peavey, architect, HKS and Evelyn Mayo, chair of Downwinders at Risk. Here on stage at the Dallas Museum of Art
State of the Arts: Poisoned by Zip Code, Mended by Design
For years, a giant pile of hazardous waste plagued the Dallas neighborhood of Floral Farms. The notorious Shingle Mountain is gone now, but what happens next?
In our latest State of the Arts conversation, join KERA Arts Reporter Miguel Perez in conversation with artist Ari Brielle, community activist Marsha Jackson, Erin Peavey, architect with HKS and Evelyn Mayo of Downwinders at Risk.
State of the Arts: Poisoned by Zip Code, Mended by Design is an in-person event on Saturday, March 5, at the Dallas Museum of Art. Register for the free conversation here. Can't make it in person? The event will be also be live-streamed on the DMA's YouTube channel.
Rethinking The Future Award
The story of the Floral Farms Park is one of reclamation, connection, and healing. It’s not just about the removing an illegal dumping site, where a mountain of shingles grew to be six-stories tall— it’s about reclaiming the identity of a vibrant neighborhood that came to be known as “where Shingle Mountain is”.
The Work of Rest: Psychology Today
Rest is essential to keeping one's mind and body fertile, creative, and well. Here’s my personal and scientific journey of investing in rest.