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The nature of innovation in hospital building design: a mixed grounded theory study

Anahita Sal Moslehian (Faculty of Science Engineering and Built Environment, School of Architecture and Built Environment, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia)
Tuba Kocaturk (Faculty of Science Engineering and Built Environment, School of Architecture and Built Environment, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia)
Fiona Andrews (Faculty of Health, School of Health and Social Development, Deakin University, Burwood, Australia)
Richard Tucker (Faculty of Science Engineering and Built Environment, School of Architecture and Built Environment, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia)

Construction Innovation

ISSN: 1471-4175

Article publication date: 9 May 2022

Issue publication date: 11 July 2023

304

Abstract

Purpose

Despite the undeniable need for innovation in hospital building design, the literature highlights the disconnect between research and practice as the primary knowledge gap hindering such innovation. This study shows this focus to be an oversimplification, for the complex processes that trigger design innovations and impact their ecosystems need to be examined from a systemic perspective. This paper aims to conceptualise the evolution of hospital building design and identify and explain the main factors triggering design and construction innovations over the past 100 years.

Design/methodology/approach

A novel hybrid research design to mixed grounded theory (MGT) methodology, with Charmaz constructivist paradigm, is developed as a new systematic way of constructing and interpreting the concepts and interconnections among them that triggered design innovation.

Findings

This study represents a taxonomy of concepts and an explanatory innovation framework, containing 617 interconnections between 146 factors classified across 14 categories. The complex innovation ecosystem comprises multi-faceted processes between heterogenous factors with both individual and collective impacts on design innovations.

Originality/value

This research highlights the main components of the innovation ecosystem and its overall behaviour in this field, and the most influential and interrelated contextual factors, as well as representing and mapping generative interactions that support innovation processes. This knowledge can help hospital researchers, designers, policymakers and stakeholders adopt a multidimensional outlook to analyse the strength of all influential factors, introduce potential novel ways of collaborating, conceptualise an organisational approach, re-formulate research questions through transdisciplinary methods and introduce interdisciplinary courses and programs in architecture schools, thereby contributing to timely design innovation.

Keywords

Citation

Sal Moslehian, A., Kocaturk, T., Andrews, F. and Tucker, R. (2023), "The nature of innovation in hospital building design: a mixed grounded theory study", Construction Innovation, Vol. 23 No. 4, pp. 792-814. https://doi.org/10.1108/CI-12-2021-0236

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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