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Courses/Architecture/Design

Mixed-Methods Approach to Human-Centric Design

Master the intersection of hard data and deep empathy to uncover actionable insights and design innovative products that truly resonate with your users.

Created byHelia Taheri
BeginnerUpdated May 14, 2026
Mixed-Methods Approach to Human-Centric Design

What You'll Learn

check_circleIdentify how clear design intent and evidence-based decision-making contribute to people-centred building design.
check_circleExplain the role of mixed-methods research in understanding occupant needs, behaviours, and experiences.
check_circleRecognise how buildings influence physical, mental, cognitive, and social wellbeing.
check_circleApply practical tools and strategies to reduce bias and improve measurable design outcomes in projects.

About This Course

How can we design buildings that genuinely put people first? This course explores how clear design intent, evidence-based decision-making, and a focus on real-world impact can transform the spaces we create. Participants will examine the value of mixed-methods research — combining quantitative and qualitative, as well as subjective and objective data — to reduce bias and better understand people’s needs, behaviours, experiences, and the ways buildings affect occupants. The session also introduces a whole-person approach to design, addressing not only physical health, but also mental, cognitive, and social wellbeing.

By the end of the session, participants will have a clearer understanding of how these approaches can reduce bias in design and reveal the often-overlooked ways buildings influence people’s lives. Practical tools and techniques will be shared for immediate application in projects, leaving attendees better equipped to design with both intention and measurable impact in mind.

Key Topics Discussed:

  • Human-centered and whole-person design approach
  • The non-neutrality of physical spaces
  • Intent-Design-Impact framework
  • Mixed-methods research and triangulation
  • The impact of unpredictable occupant behavior on building energy consumption
  • The five phases of simplified evidence-based design
  • The importance of clear, researchable research questions
  • Whole-person health (intersection of physical, mental, and social health)
  • User journey mapping and low-fidelity prototyping
  • Post-occupancy evaluation (measuring design success 6–12 months later)
  • Qualitative vs. Quantitative data (the "Why" vs. the "What")
  • Subjective vs. Objective data categorization
  • Research tools and technologies (sensors, EEG headsets, Miro, Survey platforms)

Your Instructor

Helia Taheri
Helia Taheri

Research & Insights Lead | Associate | Arcadis

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Dr. Helia Taheri is an award-winning researcher, speaker, and the Research & Insights Lead at Arcadis, leading mixed-methods human-centric research across global projects. Bridging academia and industry, and grounded in place attachment theory, neuroarchitecture, and wellbeing research, she translates human experience into evidence-based design strategies. Like a hummingbird, she pollinates across fields and sectors—bridging silos, empowering voices, and sharing insights that help people flourish, yielding meaningful, impactful buildings and cities that improve lives, strengthen organizations, and benefit our beautiful planet.

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We are a registered provider with 327+ associations and regulatory bodies worldwide. We operate across 29 global markets including Canada, the US, Australia, and the UK. Every course page clearly displays its specific accreditations. Upon completion, you receive a professional certificate that can be validated online. Our certificates include all necessary accreditation details, credit hours, and completion dates, and are formatted specifically to meet the submission requirements of most global regulatory bodies.