The Royal Women’s Hospital in Melbourne underwent significant updates to enhance its birthing facilities and services. The project involved converting two existing Labour, Delivery, and Recovery (LDR) rooms into negative pressure rooms, transforming two assessment rooms into a single LDR with upgraded bed, bath, and storage amenities, and repurposing the existing Anaesthetic department into five new assessment rooms with a dedicated reception area. Additionally, the Biomedical Lab was relocated and expanded into a larger, state-of-the-art facility on the ground floor, while the former lab space was converted into a new workspace for the Anaesthetic department.

The design prioritises the mother’s journey, emphasising safe, comfortable, and empowering birthing environments. Key interventions focus on flexibility and personalisation, allowing women to tailor their surroundings with adjustable options for sound, lighting, and privacy to suit their preferences. Clinical aesthetics were softened through thoughtful joinery, warm material palettes, and biophilic design principles, introducing natural light and connections to nature for a calming atmosphere.

Research underscores that birthing spaces centred around the mother’s experience significantly enhance outcomes. When women feel safe, relaxed, and in control of their environment, medical interventions are often reduced, recovery times improve, and future birthing decisions become less daunting. These design choices not only improve the immediate birthing experience but also contribute to long-term positive impacts for mothers and their families.

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