green wall color and art contribute meaningfully to physical relaxation
Exact: .630
Green-colored wall décor and art produced a physical relaxation utility score of .630, ranking third among all hospital room attribute levels
Beyond plants and window views, green-colored interior décor (wall color and artwork) contributed meaningfully to perceived physical relaxation with a part-worth score of .630. Its relative importance score was 19.83, the third highest among the six attributes, reinforcing the restorative value of green color symbolism in healthcare interior design.
In terms of plantscapes, respondents indicated high physical relaxation utility from the indoor plantscapes (physical relaxation score = .972), followed by green nature in view (physical relaxation score = .904) and green wall color and art (physical relaxation score = .630).
Related findings
82.0%
high perceived impact of environmental design on children's behavioral and academic outcomes
Inclusive architectural design is perceived to strongly support behavioral and academic outcomes for children with neurodevelopmental disorders
Heba M. Abdou et al., 2026, Architecture
20%+
more than one in five office workers dissatisfied regardless of WELL certification
Over 1 in 5 office workers dissatisfied with their physical environment regardless of certification
Samin Marzban et al., 2023, Building and Environment
number of perceived sensory dimensions did not predict psychological restoration
Number of highly perceived sensory dimensions did not significantly correlate with psychological restoration
Ling Qiu et al., 2021, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Read more in
Healthcare
Education What school spaces do to children
Where the evidence on classroom air, acoustics, light and green is robust, where it is thin, and what to measure before the build.
Workplace What your office costs
Four design variables that move cognitive performance and who pays for them
More from The Built Review
Workplace Pricing biophilia: what the evidence is worth
Read at the primary sources, the business case for nature in buildings is narrower than advertised and strong enough to act on.
Healthcare Built to Wake: How Hospital Noise and Light Undermine Patient Sleep
Of the two environmental levers on inpatient sleep, noise control is the better proven and the cheaper, while tunable lighting for the general ward is the one the evidence does not yet support.
Workplace Germany's missing indoor-air bill
France, Britain and Australia have priced bad indoor air. Germany's missing number is a political choice, not a methodological limit.