A THREAD
It was May 1993, Margaret Jencks sat in a windowless corridor of a small Scottish hospital, dreading what would come next. The prognosis was bad, her cancer had returned, but the waiting, and the waiting room, were draining. In such neglected, thoughtless spaces, she wrote, patients like herself were left to “wilt” under the desiccating glare of fluorescent lights.
A PROSPECTIVE QUESTION : "If Architecture could demoralize patients by contributing to extreme and mental enervation, could it not also prove restorative?"