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Dr. Terri Peters

Terri Peters
Associate Professor
BA, BEDS, DipArch, PhD

Areas of Specialization

Architectural design

Architectural pedagogy

Daylighting

Design for health

Healthy housing

Resilient environments

Social sustainability

Education

Year University Degree
2015 Aarhus Architecture School PhD
2008 Kingston University PGDip Arch/ RIBA III
2006 London Metropolitan University DipArch/ RIBA II
2002 Dalhousie University BEDS
2000 University of Victoria BA

Selected Courses

Course Code Course Title
ASC 201 Design Studio
ASC 200 Sustainable Practices
ASC 301 Design Studio II
ASC 521 Light/Sound in Architecture
BL8211   Lighting in Buildings
ARC 920 Advanced Architecture Studio

Spotlight

Terri Peters has long been interested in the effects of building performance on well-being; but when she lived in Copenhagen, she experienced it firsthand. Design there was different, especially in the medium-rise housing blocks that many, including Peters herself, called home. Instead of the long, dark condos that are typical of North America, balconies facing sunny courtyards were common, as was a focus on hygge, meaning coziness. “In Denmark,” she says, “quality of life is most important.”

It’s important for Peters, too. Much of her research focuses on superarchitecture: where design is driven by what adds to our health, such as wide-open views, good air flow, maximized daylight and access to the outdoors. Here in Canada, Peters wants superarchitecture to play more of a central role. However, as many of these elements are not quantitative—i.e. how do you measure that calm feeling you get from a well-lit room?—there are challenges.

To overcome them, Peters is researching strategies that benefit both our natural environment and our well-being, like appropriate uses of daylight and testing design options via digital simulation. She’s also speaking up at various health-related conferences. “The more architects who advocate, the healthier our buildings will be.”

Terri Peters

“Our buildings can make us better—if we let them.”

  • A. Boissonneault, T. Peters. An Exploration of Post-Occupancy Evaluation in Canada: Origins, milestones and next steps, Building Research and Information. 2023. DOI: 10.1080/09613218.2023.2192905
  • T. Peters, S. Masoudinejad. Balconies as Dynamic Spaces in Adaptable Apartment Housing, Buildings & Cities. 3(1), 2022. pp. 265–278. https://doi.org/10.5334/bc.191
  • T. Peters, S. Verderber. Biophilic Design Strategies in Long-Term Residential Care Environments for Persons with Dementia, Journal of Aging and Environment, 2021. https://doi.org/10.1080/26892618.2021.1918815
  • T. Peters. The Social Contexts of Resilient Architecture in Multisystemic Resilience: Adaptation and Transformation in Contexts of Change, M. Ungar Ed. Oxford University Press, 2021, p.625-681. ISBN: 978-0190095888.
  • Peters T, Alkhalli N*, Kesik T, O'Brien L. (2020) Metrics And Methods For Climate-based Daylight Simulations Of Multi-Unit Residential Buildings. 2020 Building Performance Analysis Conference and SimBuild, September 29- October 1 2020, Chicago, Illinois, Chicago, United States
  • T. Peters, A. Halleran.  How our Homes Impact our Health: Using a COVID-19 Informed Approach to Examine Apartment Housing, Archnet-International Journal of Architectural Research, Vol. 15(1), 2020, p.10-27.  https://doi.org/10.1108/ARCH-08-2020-0159,
  • T. Kesik, L. O'Brien, T. Peters. Enhancing the Liveability and Resilience of Multi-Unit Residential Buildings (MURB): MURB Design Guide, Version 2.0, 2019. https://pbs.daniels.utoronto.ca/faculty/kesik_t/PBS/Kesik-Resources/MURB-Design-Guide-v2-Feb2019.pdf
  • S. Coleman, M. Touchie, J. Robinson, T. Peters. Rethinking Performance Gaps: A Regenerative Sustainability Approach to Built Environment Performance Assessment. Sustainability. 2018. 10(12) 4829. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10124829
  • Peters T., Peters B. (2018) Computing the Environment:  Digital Design Tools for Simulation and Visualisation of Sustainable Architecture, (Chichester: John Wiley & Sons). ISBN: 978-1-119-09789-1
  • Peters T, Editor, (2017) Special Issue: Design for Health: Sustainable Approaches to Therapeutic Architecture. Architectural Design, Chichester: John Wiley & Sons, March/April 2017).  ISBN: 978-1-119-16213-1
  • 2023 “Benchmark 2023: Future Forward—Adaptive Change in Architecture Education and Practice” Canadian Architect, November 2023, page 46-49. Coauthored with Dr Ted Kesik at University of Toronto. https://www.canadianarchitect.com/benchmark-2023-future-forward-adaptive-change-in-architecture-education-and-practice/
  • 2023 Presentation: “New Approaches to Long Term Care Design” in the session: “Un-Exposed: Co-Creating New Models for Care, Community, Wellness, and Dignity” OAA Conference Designing for Dignity 2023. Sudbury, Ontario. June 23 2023
  • 2022 Presenter: “Workshop: Design for Healthy Aging: Solutions Across the Continuum of Care” August 17-18 2022 The Center for Health Design. https://www.healthdesign.org/events/429
  • 2021 “What Makes Architecture Excellent? Prioritizing People, Place, and Purpose." Architect, September 2021 p.64-77. https://www.architectmagazine.com/design/what-makes-architecture-excellent-today_o
  • 2020 "High Rise Habitats 55 Years Later" Canadian Architect, November 2020 page 47-49. Coauthored with Dr Ted Kesik at University of Toronto.
    https://www.canadianarchitect.com/high-rise-habitats-55-years-later/
  • 2020 Conference Presentation: Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (RAIC) Conference, Academic Summit. “Healthier and Happier: Designing for Wellbeing and Daylight” Edmonton, July 9, 2020.
  • 2019 Presentation: "Rethinking Liveability in the Design and Development of Multi-Unit Housing" 7th Active House
  • Symposium, Brickworks Toronto 16-17 September 2019, Toronto, Canada
  • 2019 Keynote: “Superarchitecture: Daylight as a Driver for Change” at 7th Annual VELUX Daylight Symposium, May 3-4, Berlin Germany. http://thedaylightsite.com/symposium/2019-2/
  • Invited workshop: “Superarchitecture”, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) Interdisciplinary Workshop on Multi-Systemic Resilience, led by Dr Michael Ungar, Johannesburg, South Africa 2017.