Conceptualising the “Fourth Space” in Aged Care Environments: A Design Framework Informed by Melbourne and Chinese architecture
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.71411/rae.2026.v2i2.1454摘要
Amid the acceleration of global aging, the lack of emotional companionship and social
connection has become increasingly prominent among the aged population. However, traditional
aged care spaces continue to follow the functionalist logic of medical architecture, making it difficult
to respond to residents’ emotional needs for “companionship” and “being seen.”
Based on the author’s nearly 20 years of experience in medical and aged care services, as well as
three months of field observations in Melbourne in early 2026, this paper proposes the concept of a
“Fourth Space” and develops a corresponding theoretical framework for aging societies.
The study first reviews global aging trends and the dilemma of emotional companionship among the
aged population, arguing that “social interaction” emphasised by traditional Third Place theory may,
in elderly care contexts, transform into a source of social pressure. Through continuous observation
of Federation Square and the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne, this study finds that high
quality public spaces are shifting from “promoting interaction” to “allowing coexistence.” Their
characteristics, such as weak boundaries, non-mandatory interaction, and what the paper terms
“environmentalised companionship”, offer new insights for the design of aged care space.
On this basis, the paper defines the “Fourth Space” as a transitional environment between private
and public spaces, emphasising a mode of presence characterised by coexistence rather than active
communication. It further proposes three key design directions: (1) minimal boundary construction,
which reduces psychological defense by blurring spatial boundaries; (2) non-mandatory interaction
mechanisms, which allow individuals to coexist in diverse ways without forced communication; and
(3) an AI-enabled environmental companionship system, which integrates artificial intelligence into
spatial environments to form low-intervention, long-term companionship relationships.
The study further validates the feasibility of this framework through practical cases in Chinese
aged care institutions, demonstrating that the “Fourth Space” can be gradually implemented
through incremental spatial optimisation. The findings suggest that the “Fourth Space” is not
only an extension of the Third Place theory in aging contexts, but also a crucial spatial paradigm for
addressing emotional needs in aging societies, offering both theoretical and practical implications for
future aged care models.
下载
已出版
期次
栏目
许可协议
版权所有 (c) 2026 建筑与环境研究

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.