In 2022 two floors of this Chelsea Town House underwent a change of use and a major refurbishment to become part of the Violet Melchett Health and Wellbeing Hub.
This new site for the Health and Wellbeing Hub was created to compliment the services offered at the main Flood Walk hub. Despite the two buildings being very different in size and layout, utilising the same finishes, branding and wall artwork styles unifies the two spaces.
Wellbeing Windows was asked to advise and implement a full range of wellbeing and communication projects: from the building branding, signage, interior paint colours, furniture procurement and wall artworks.
Each project needed to work together so the branding and signage colours would compliment the interior paint colours, furniture and wall artworks to create a unified and relaxed experience throughout the building.
27 Artworks
A1 – A0
39 Signs
Sept 2023
"These pictures have changed our clinic rooms from being a drab and sterile clinic, into spaces that are much more welcoming, friendly and therefore spaces that feel safer. Every picture tells a thousand words and the pictures that you have provided are no exception, but I think they also send the message that our team is humble, down-to-earth and people that you can relate to."
These range across hospital wards, care homes, children's mental health centres, health and wellbeing hubs and GP practices. See the benefits and learn more about the tranformative effects of our services.
This Grade II listed building, built in 1930, is the former home of the Violet Melchett Infant Welfare Centre. In 2022 a major refurbishment was undertaken to create a new Violet Melchett Health and Wellbeing Hub.
This older, more compact, 32 bed ward needed help. It also featured four individual side rooms, multiple corridor work stations, a windowless relatives waiting room and two internal, windowless offices for the Ward Sister and doctors.
The centre had been completely refurbished 18 months ago. Modern paint colours had been used in the corridor and communal areas. All therapy rooms had been decorated in the traditional magnolia and white.