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AUC Faculty Member Reshapes Universities' Infrastructure to Facilitate Education for Autistic Students

To facilitate education for students with autism, Magda Mostafa, associate professor at the Department of Architecture at The American University in Cairo (AUC) and international autism design expert, is currently working to deliver a Dublin City University (DCU) Autism-Friendly University Design Guide, in light of her expertise and development of the Autism ASPECTSS Design Index. The index is the world's first set of evidence-based design guidelines to address built environments for individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder.

DCU was declared the world's first autism-friendly university by AsIAm, Ireland's National Autism Charity, through its educational and social support for students and staff on the autism spectrum, and is now working to expand its physical infrastructure and architecture to incorporate autistic needs.

Currently, an autism-friendly design guide for university campuses is in the works. While the design being developed is specific to DCU, Mostafa — who is now a lead consultant on the project — aims for it to be scalable and replicable across Dublin at large as well as different nations and states.

“I want this to be a lifelong document not just for DCU but also other campuses,” said Mostafa. “I want all institutions to continue to follow and implement the procedures in different ways. The hope is that this will be a living project, not a ‘one of’ and continue to expand.”

Mostafa aspires for DCU's project to be a campus guidelines pilot for every higher education institution, ultimately establishing a systemized way of constructing an autism-friendly campus including residences, buildings, classrooms, libraries, offices, food spaces and more.

"Typically, policymakers, facilitators and researchers make priorities for this community without consulting them. In this case, the autism community itself guides this initiative. I care about this in all my autism work," asserted Mostafa.

The project started as an idea from AsIAm, which together with DCU, researched and sensory-audited the campuses for 18 months to identify how it could become more autism-friendly. The feedback highlighted barriers the autistic community faced on the campuses, with the environment identified as a crucial factor to aid positive learning and well-being.

"Autistic students in university are often expected to live in student accommodation, which is crowded, unstructured and noisy,” said Adam Harris, founder and CEO of AsIAm.

Physical environments can pose other difficulties for autistic students, especially those with heightened sensory awareness to smells, such as cooking smells and cigarette smoke, bright colors, fluorescent lighting and noise, such as a bustling noisy space at peak times. Such factors lead to a "sensory overload," which can be uncomfortable, painful and distressing.  The project also entails identifying smart solutions and integrating technology in the campus design by adopting the Internet of Things (IoT) and other communication technology strategies to assist autistic members with navigation, working closely with the Smart DC initiative.

 

“Too often, designed buildings do not take account of autism accessibility requirements and services do not prioritize the very real barriers autistic people face in managing the environment," added Harris.

Autistic individuals, Mostafa explained, need access to space throughout the day to resort to when they're overwhelmed and need to take a break, and transportation is a "big stress point" for them. Accordingly, Mostafa is working with DCU to build more inclusive on-campus student residences, taking factors such as material selection, color, lighting and interior design into account.

“It is with great enthusiasm that we embark on this piece of work with Magda Mostafa,” said Fiona Earley, autism-friendly university coordinator at DCU. “We feel very privileged to be working with someone who is so aligned with [our] values of inclusion and diversity.”

Hassell Studio, an international design consultancy, has been invited by Mostafa as a UK-based sub-consultant to help support the project under her direction.” These design guidelines will, we hope, be an important step for helping greater influence for other typologies and scales too, such as the workplace, transport, cities and residential sectors,” said Julian Gitsham, principal and practice architecture leader at Hassell Studio.

Today, Mostafa is thrilled that higher education institutions are now factoring in support for individuals with disabilities and even prouder that disability services have expanded to include autism. As a result of COVID-19's physical campus access restrictions, there are some timeline changes to the project's completion, but the project is moving ahead and expected to come to light in early 2021.

 

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Founded in 1919, The American University in Cairo (AUC) is a leading English-language, American- accredited institution of higher education and center of the intellectual, social, and cultural life of the Arab world. It is a vital bridge between East and West, linking Egypt and the region to the world through scholarly research, partnerships with academic and research institutions and study abroad programs. 

The University offers 39 undergraduate, 52 master’s and two PhD programs rooted in a liberal arts education that encourages students to think critically and find creative solutions to conflicts and challenges facing both the region and the world. 

An independent, nonprofit, politically non-partisan, non-sectarian and equal opportunity institution, AUC is fully accredited in Egypt and the United States.