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Healthcare Architecture: The Latest Architecture and News

Family Health Center on Virginia / Model of Architecture Serving Society (MASS)

Family Health Center on Virginia / Model of Architecture Serving Society (MASS) - Interior Photography, Wellbeing, FacadeFamily Health Center on Virginia / Model of Architecture Serving Society (MASS) - Interior Photography, Wellbeing, Door, Table, Chair, CountertopFamily Health Center on Virginia / Model of Architecture Serving Society (MASS) - Interior Photography, Wellbeing, TableFamily Health Center on Virginia / Model of Architecture Serving Society (MASS) - Exterior Photography, Wellbeing, FacadeFamily Health Center on Virginia / Model of Architecture Serving Society (MASS) - More Images+ 6

OB Kindergarten and Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro

OB Kindergarten and Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro - Kindergarten, Facade, HandrailOB Kindergarten and Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro - KindergartenOB Kindergarten and Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro - Kindergarten, Facade, Table, ChairOB Kindergarten and Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro - Kindergarten, Facade, DoorOB Kindergarten and Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro - More Images+ 23

OMA's New Film Explores the Hospital of the Future

A new film by OMA / Reinier de Graaf titled “The Hospital of the Future” has been released as a part of the exhibition, Twelve Cautionary Urban Tales at Matadero Madrid Centre for Contemporary Creation. Dubbed a “visual manifesto”, the 12-minute short film questions the long-standing conventions in the field of healthcare architecture in terms of the methodology behind how hospitals are built and also why they are built in certain ways. Through an exploration of the role that disease has played in shaping cities, the film offers a lens into the future of what we might expect for healthcare design, especially as we emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Role of BIM in Public Projects: Using Technology to Achieve Efficiency and Comfort

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BIM and 3D modeling are essential in today’s architecture field. What they aren’t, however, is static or prescriptive. The way BIM is integrated varies not just by firm, but even by individual project. The size of the building, structure of the project team, or even government mandates can dictate how a firm utilizes their BIM capabilities. Belgian firm Osar Architects found that Vectorworks is the best match for the way they run their office. Specifically, Vectorworks Architect is well-matched for the type and extent of modeling they do because it's flexible to fit the needs of each project.

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Foster + Partners Begins Construction on Cairo's New Global Heart Hospital

Foster + Partners has begun construction on the new Magdi Yacoub Global Heart Centre in Cairo, Egypt. With views of the Pyramids of Giza, the hospital site borders the Zewail City of Science and Technology as part of an integrated health and medical research zone. The design was made to respond to the needs of patients, their families and the staff that care for them while decreasing recovery times.

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Spaces for Communication: Improving Connections and Care in the Built Environment

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For several years, Rosi Pachilova has been looking into and building upon the tools we use to analyse and configure layouts for our built environment. Together with Dr Kerstin Sailer, a reader in Social and Spatial Networks at the Space Syntax Laboratory, UCL, she has developed a tool that can assess spatial proposals for their impact on the quality of care of healthcare providers. In 2019, their work was awarded the RIBA President’s Award for Research in the Building in Quality category.

3 Major Architecture Firms Propose School Buses and Shipping Containers for Accessible Testing Labs

Despite all the news of re-openings, lifted restrictions, al fresco options dining, and a return to something more closely resembling “normal,” COVID-19 is still very much with us. And despite the defeatist/downplayed/nothing to see here stance embraced by the current presidential administration, the United States is still in the midst of an unprecedented public health crisis. In some states, both new reported cases and hospitalizations have now reached record highs.

This being said, the need for accessible, easy to fabricate, and quick-to-deploy testing facility solutions are still in great need, particularly in dense urban areas, at large institutions and workplaces, and in underserved communities where coronavirus testing might come as a luxury, not a basic necessity. In terms of testing availability, all bases need to and must be covered.

Alternative Healthcare Facilities: Architects Mobilize their Creativity in Fight against COVID-19

As the healthcare infrastructure is becoming overwhelmed and hospitals around the world are reaching their capacities, new alternative possibilities are emerging. In response to bed shortage and facility saturation, architects around the world are taking action, in the on-going fight against the coronavirus. Focusing their knowhow to find fast and efficient design solutions that can be implemented anywhere, they are proposing flexible, fast assembled, mobile, and simple structures. With a very tight timetable, some projects are already implemented and in service, while others remain on a conceptual level, waiting to be adopted.

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How to Design Partitions for Healthcare Architecture: 9 Details of High-Performance Walls

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Concerns about the hygiene, durability, and healthiness of interior spaces have increased considerably in recent years, drawing extreme attention to hospital and health-related projects. Consequently, the choice of materials becomes essential from the conception of each project, guaranteeing that each space performs effectively on all fronts, from resistance and safety to environmental comfort and aesthetics.

In particular, the enclosures in hospitals and health centers must conform to a series of predetermined guidelines and dimensions, which respond to the standardized sizes of different types of equipment and to the needs of each medical procedure. Within the robust framework of the structural walls, the partitions – which are essential for subdividing the space – must be especially resistant to impact, fire, and humidity, in addition to effectively mediating the acoustics between rooms and inside each one of them.

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JCC Lab / Espaço Oficina

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  • Architects: Espaço Oficina
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  200
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2018
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Grohe, Davide Groppi, Nordlux, Ségis, ZWCAD

Emergency Public Hospital in São Bernardo do Campo / SPBR Arquitetos

Emergency Public Hospital in São Bernardo do Campo / SPBR Arquitetos - Exterior Photography, Hospital , FacadeEmergency Public Hospital in São Bernardo do Campo / SPBR Arquitetos - Interior Photography, Hospital , FacadeEmergency Public Hospital in São Bernardo do Campo / SPBR Arquitetos - Interior Photography, Hospital Emergency Public Hospital in São Bernardo do Campo / SPBR Arquitetos - Exterior Photography, Hospital Emergency Public Hospital in São Bernardo do Campo / SPBR Arquitetos - More Images+ 37

São Bernardo do Campo, Brazil

The Importance of Antibacterial Surfaces in Healthcare Architecture

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The Importance of Antibacterial Surfaces in Healthcare Architecture - Image 4 of 4
HU – Strasbourg / S&AA. Image Cortesía de Porcelanosa Grupo

Although any architectural project must ensure the safety and well-being of its occupants, this goal is especially pertinent for healthcare spaces, whose primary occupants are those prone to getting sick or worsening their initial condition. For this reason, its design must not only support medical procedures in their optimal conditions, but also ensure that the environment is kept sterile and clean at all times.

How do materials that fight the growth of pathogenic bacteria work? Is it possible to improve the hygiene and healthiness of an environment without neglecting the aesthetics of the space? We address this question by reviewing the case of Krion® solid surfaces, widely used in the healthcare sector but also in residential, commercial and office projects.

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"Design is Not Neutral": Alberto Salvatore on Building for Healthier Cities and Wellness

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Designing for health and wellness is inherent to architecture. At HED, great architecture is rooted in real world outcomes that foster healthier spaces and environments. Today, the firm's healthcare team works to deliver progressive medical care facilities grounded in continuous learning, adaptation and experience. As the firm's National Healthcare Design Leader, Alberto Salvatore is working to inspire a Culture of Health across the United States.

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Hassell Leads Design for Healthcare Precinct and First Medi-Hotel in Western Australia

Hassell has approached health and wellness differently in the newest healthcare facility in Western Australia. With innovation at the core of the architectural concept, the Murdoch Knowledge Health Precinct puts people first, creating a state-of-the-art intervention, a hub for activities and interconnected public spaces.

WTA Design 60 Emergency Quarantine Facilities to Fight COVID-19

As hospitals around the world are reaching their capacity, the architecture and design community is developing new alternatives to fight COVID-19. In order to build 60 Emergency Quarantine Facilities (EQF), WTA was inspired by their pavilion developed last year, part of the Anthology Festival. A viable quarantine structure, the Boysen Pavilion “embodied speed, scalability and simplicity in its structure”.

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C.O Kindergarten and Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro

C.O Kindergarten and Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro - Kindergarten, FacadeC.O Kindergarten and Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro - Kindergarten, FacadeC.O Kindergarten and Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro - Kindergarten, Door, FacadeC.O Kindergarten and Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro - Kindergarten, Chair, TableC.O Kindergarten and Nursery / HIBINOSEKKEI + Youji no Shiro - More Images+ 24

Infectious Disease Mitigation: 9 Healthcare Facilities Designed by MASS

Addressing contextual severe healthcare problems, like the outbreak of infectious diseases or maternal mortality, MASS has helped in setting design strategies to mitigate and reduce critical medical concerns. With some projects operational, and others in the pipeline, the facilities imagined, tackle a wide range of complications.

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Opposite Office Imagines the New Berlin Airport as a COVID-19 Hospital

Opposite Office has proposed to transform the new Berlin airport, under construction since 2006, into a “Superhospital” for coronavirus patients. In an attempt to prepare the healthcare system and increase its capabilities, Opposite Office presented an adaptive reuse alternative, drawing contextual solutions to fight the pandemic.