A Refurbishment with Meaning to Encourage Connection
When The Care Home Interiors Company was invited to support the refurbishment of Fordingbridge Care Home by Allegra Care, the brief was never simply to “make it look nice.”
This was a high-functioning dementia care environment, and the design needed to work hard. It needed to support daily life, encourage movement, create moments of interest, aid orientation and help residents feel more confident, more connected and more at ease within their surroundings.
Working alongside Fed3, The Care Home Interiors Company approached the project with one clear objective to turn underused spaces into meaningful places. Before the refurbishment, the corridors were dark, bare and uninviting. Like many care home corridors, they served a practical purpose but offered little in the way of warmth, recognition or engagement.
For people living with dementia, this can make an environment feel confusing or even disorientating. Long, featureless corridors can become spaces to pass through, rather than places to pause, understand and enjoy. The solution was to introduce a series of purposeful, themed destinations throughout the home. Each space was carefully designed to provide strong visual cues, familiar references and opportunities for interaction.
Rather than relying on flat artwork alone, the design included layered, 3D elements and recognisable objects that could be touched, explored and discussed. These small details are powerful. They can prompt memories, encourage conversation and help residents make sense of where they are.
One end-of-corridor space became The Workshop, a tactile, familiar feature designed to spark recognition and reminiscence. With authentic, real-world cues, it created a strong orientation point while also offering a hands-on moment of interest.
Another destination was designed around the theme of a train carriage. More than a decorative idea, it created a purposeful place to pause and reminisce, using familiar travel cues to support both wayfinding and conversation. It transformed what could have been “just the end of a corridor” into a place with meaning, character and emotional connection.
A retro music wall was also introduced, using recognisable album art to create both an orientation point and a natural conversation starter. Music is often deeply connected to memory, identity and emotion, and familiar visual references can unlock stories, comments and shared moments. A corridor that once had little to say now had the potential to invite memories of dancing, favourite songs, concerts and moments from the past.
The refurbishment also included a garden and activity-inspired area, designed to feel calm, familiar and inviting. Shelving, objects and styling were used not simply as decoration, but as prompts for participation and gentle engagement. In dementia-friendly design, these touchpoints matter. They quietly invite people to explore, browse, remember and belong.
The biggest change was not just visual. It was atmospheric. On the final visit, the difference could already be seen. Individuals were moving more naturally through the spaces, stopping, looking, chatting and engaging with their surroundings. Corridors had become destinations. Empty walls had become prompts. The environment had become easier to understand and more enjoyable to live within.
For The Care Home Interiors Company, this is exactly what good design in care should do. It should support the people who live there. It should make daily life feel calmer, safer and more meaningful.
In a care home supporting people living with dementia, design has a vital role to play. It can help with wayfinding, reduce uncertainty, encourage independence and create natural opportunities for interaction. It can make a building feel less institutional and more like a home filled with familiar, recognisable and comforting cues.
The Fordingbridge refurbishment is a powerful example of how thoughtful interior design can transform not only how a care home looks, but how it feels and functions.