CHOOSE SITE
Back to Speakers
Bryan Ruby

Bryan Ruby

Senior ArchitectBHDP Architecture

Bryan believes that healthcare design naturally lends itself to the inherent well-being of its communities. As an experienced Senior Architect on the Healthcare team, Bryan’s entire career has focused on healthcare architecture and acute care design, and he has been exposed to almost every project type within a hospital setting. In his practice, Bryan tends to take a classical approach to his designs and applies these timeless styles to modern ideas.

Sun Oct 183:15 PM – 4:15 PM

E44 – Closing the Loop: Using Pre- and Post-Occupancy Measurement to Inform Healthcare Design

Healthcare projects are often evaluated only after occupancy, limiting their ability to inform design decisions and demonstrate project success. Pairi…Healthcare projects are often evaluated only after occupancy, limiting their ability to inform design decisions and demonstrate project success. Pairing pre- and post-occupancy measurements creates a stronger framework by establishing a baseline, tes…Healthcare projects are often evaluated only after occupancy, limiting their ability to inform design decisions and demonstrate project success. Pairing pre- and post-occupancy measurements creates a stronger framework by establishing a baseline, testing design intent, and producing evidence to guide future projects. This session explores paired pre- and post-occupancy surveys through an inpatient pharmacy renovation at University of Cincinnati H…Healthcare projects are often evaluated only after occupancy, limiting their ability to inform design decisions and demonstrate project success. Pairing pre- and post-occupancy measurements creates a stronger framework by establishing a baseline, testing design intent, and producing evidence to guide future projects. This session explores paired pre- and post-occupancy surveys through an inpatient pharmacy renovation at University of Cincinnati Health. A pre-occupancy survey identified workflow inefficiencies, organizational challenges, and operational constraints that informed design goals, spatial planning, equipment integration, and collaboration strategies. These findings established clear hypotheses for post-occupancy evaluation. Constructed in two phases to maintain continuous operations, the renovation integrated advanced automation within tight constraints. POE feedback collected three months after completion was evaluated against the baseline to directly assess design performance. Attendees will learn how paired measurement provides practical guidance to inform design decisions and future healthcare projects.Show MoreClick the title to see all detailsShow More

Educational SessionSession TypeResearch, Outcomes, & Lessons LearnedSession Track
Bryan Ruby
Bill Dillon
Justin Ferguson
Bryan Ruby
Bryan RubySenior Architect, BHDP Architecture
Bill Dillon
Bill DillonSenior Project Manager, University of Cincinnati Health
Justin Ferguson
Justin FergusonDirector of Applied Research, BHDP
Bryan Ruby
Bryan RubySenior Architect, BHDP Architecture
Bill Dillon
Bill DillonSenior Project Manager, University of Cincinnati Health
Justin Ferguson
Justin FergusonDirector of Applied Research, BHDP
AIA Forums Track:No
Allow Registration:No
Capacity Unlimited:No
Clinical Track:No
Facilities and Project Management Track:No