Understanding the interior design of selected SAPS stations in Durban with specific reference to User Centred Design
Files
Date
2021-04
Authors
Kenny, Shelly Anthea
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
This study investigated and sought to understand the extent and role of user-centred interior design of South African Police Service (SAPS) stations in Durban.
The assumption of this study was that the design of a SAPS station that considers
the most vulnerable would benefit the other users of the SAPS station. Therefore,
the persona of User Centred Design would be the client who had reported a
crime. This study aimed to understand the clients’ perspective on the SAPS
police station, as the proposed outcome would be to make User Centred Design
decisions based on the clients’ perspectives and experiences, because the client
persona of the SAPS station would be traumatised. The objective of this study
was to review literature on User Centred Design, Sensory Processing, Post
Traumatic Stress, Acute Stress Disorder and literature on South African police
stations. As well as conduct field work by interviewing clients that have reported
crimes to the SAPS station and to also to conduct interviews with South African
Police Service officers.
Hermeneutic phenomenology was utilised to understand the perspective and
experience of the SAPS client. The notion of the double hermeneutic was the
main tool and basis of understanding. The first half of the double hermeneutic
was the context of the SAPS station. The context of the SAPS station was
understood by the hermeneutic circle, in which the whole of the context was
understood by its parts, which gave a greater understanding of the whole. The
parts of the context were SAPS literature, six interviews of SAPS officers and
observing three Durban SAPS stations. The second half of the double
hermeneutic was understanding the client persona. This was done again with
the use of the hermeneutic circle, where the parts of the client persona were the
nine interviews of participants who had been to report crimes to the SAPS station,
the literature on trauma and a brief background description of the participant. The
two halves of the double hermeneutic were reflexively brought together using
User Centred Design themes. These themes informed the User Centred Design
needs of the SAPS client.
It was found that the current SAPS stations do not meet the User Centred Design
needs of the client; that this resulted in the client projecting their trauma onto the
station and allowed for the client to judge the SAPS officer negatively before the
client engaged with the officer. The main needs of the client are to feel safe and
secure, to have privacy, to have a welcoming and friendly SAPS station
atmosphere and to have clear directions. A disconnect between SAPS officer
and SAPS client, which reinforced the notion of unmet expectations, was the
result of these unmet basic needs. Therefore, the recommendation of this study
is that the interior of SAPS stations should be considered in terms of user centred
design in order to fully grapple with the needs of the SAPS client
Description
Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the Master of Applied Arts in Interior Design at the Durban University of Technology, 2021.
Keywords
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/3580