Mar 03, 2026
Now Live: The BUILD CARE Knowledge-Sharing Platform
How does the built environment influence children’s everyday lives after a stroke? And how can landscapes of care be designed to better support affected children and their families?
The international research project BUILD CARE addressed these questions from 2022 to 2025, focusing on the built environment - from home and school to hospital and rehabilitation facilities - and its importance for children and families after a childhood stroke.
A key project outcome is now online - the BUILD CARE Knowledge-Sharing Platform: https://build-care.eu/
The platform brings together selected insights from our interdisciplinary collaboration across architecture, health economics, and cognitive neuroscience in Austria, Belgium, and Germany. Its aim is to present research findings in a practice-oriented and accessible format. It is intended for affected families, architects and planners, patient organizations and advocacy groups, and all those engaged in creating inclusive built environments.
We warmly invite you to explore the platform and share it within your networks.
Contact for questions and feedback:
© SGB
PhD Student
NameDipl.-Ing. Anne-Sophie Schoß
Send encrypted email via the SecureMail portal (for TUD external users only).
Chair of Social and Health Care Buildings and Design
Visiting address:
BZW, 1. OG Raum B112 Zellescher Weg 17
01069 Dresden
This project was funded by the Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space (BMFTR) under grant number 01GM2109. The responsibility for the content of this publication lies with the authors.