Choosing Furniture for Specialist Settings
The right furniture helps turn a plain room into a useful and welcoming space. Furniture for each setting should be chosen around comfort, safety, hygiene and everyday practicality.
So, what makes furniture suitable for a particular environment?
Furniture Designed for Care Settings
A care home is both a place of care and a place where residents live, so furniture needs careful thought.
Every piece should be chosen with residents’ comfort, mobility and routine in mind.
Many care home residents may have mobility issues, aches, pains or stiffness. Furniture that is easier to get in and out of is often more practical for everyday use.
Support is just as important as comfort. Supportive chairs and beds can help reduce strain and improve posture.
Care home furniture is often chosen to feel familiar as well as practical. A more familiar style can remind residents of previous homes and make the space feel more settled.
In hospice settings, furniture may need to be more carefully adapted to support patients as comfortably as possible.
Furniture for Medical Environments
Healthcare environments need furniture that supports patients during treatment, recovery and rest.
People in healthcare settings may feel weak, uncomfortable or less able to move than usual. Comfortable furniture with enough support can help patients feel more settled.
Healthcare furniture often has wheels so staff can reposition it more easily. Flexible furniture can make care, cleaning and treatment easier to manage.
Healthcare furniture should be suitable for frequent cleaning. Wipeable surfaces and easy-clean fabrics can help support safer healthcare spaces.
A fast wipe down is often more realistic than a long cleaning process during busy periods. Easy-clean surfaces can support infection control and make daily cleaning more practical.
Hospitality Furniture
Hospitality furniture is often chosen with guest comfort in mind.
Soft sofas, warm duvets and comfortable cushions can make a hotel room feel more inviting.
Good sleep is a major part of a comfortable hotel visit. An uncomfortable bed can make an otherwise pleasant stay feel disappointing.
Other furniture should also support comfort and convenience. Chairs, sofas, cushions and footrests can all make the room more pleasant to use.
Hotel rooms should include practical storage for clothes and personal items. Spacious drawers and wardrobes can help keep the room tidy. Drink-making facilities and small fridges can reduce the need for guests to leave the room for snacks or drinks.
Hostel furniture needs to suit travellers who use communal spaces as well as shared bedrooms.
Plenty of tables and chairs can help create sociable areas for eating and relaxing. Even in shared rooms, guests may value a sense of personal space when sleeping.
Choosing Furniture for the Right Setting
The right furniture makes each environment easier, safer and more comfortable to use.
To find furniture suited to different spaces, visit the Barons Furniture website.
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