flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

Best of healthcare design for 2019

Healthcare Facilities

Best of healthcare design for 2019

A VA rehab center in Palo Alto, Calif., and a tuberculosis hospital in Haiti are among five healthcare facilities to receive 2019 Healthcare Design Awards from AIA's Academy of Architecture for Health.


By AIA and BD+C | August 1, 2019
Best of healthcare design for 2019, GHESKIO Tuberculosis Hospital, Port-au-Prince, Haiti | MASS Design Group, Photo: Iwan Baan, courtesy AIA

GHESKIO Tuberculosis Hospital, Port-au-Prince, Haiti, by MASS Design Group. Photo: Iwan Baan, www.iwan.com, courtesy AIA

   

The American Institute of Architects (AIA) Academy of Architecture for Health (AAH) named five projects winners of its 2019 Healthcare Design Awards.

The awards recognize cutting-edge designs that help solve aesthetic, civic, urban and social problems while also being functional and sustainable. Recipients can include healthcare building design, healthcare planning, and healthcare design-oriented research. 

This year’s projects were awarded by a seven-member jury: 
• Marlon Blackwell, FAIA (Chair), Marlon Blackwell Architects, Fayetteville, Arkansas
• Vincent Della Donna, AIA, ACHA, Jackson, New Jersey
• Brian Uyesugi, NBBJ, Seattle, WA
• Sunil Shah, Kaiser Permanente, Oakland, California
• Jim Henry, AIA, CallisonRTKL, Dallas, TX
• Jocelyn Stroupe, CannonDesign, Chicago, IL
• James Childress, FAIA, Centerbrook Architects, Centerbrook, Connecticut

The 2019 Healthcare Design Award winners are (project descriptions and images courtesy AIA):

 

 


Category A - Built: Less than $25 million (construction cost)

The GHESKIO Tuberculosis Hospital, Port-au-Prince, Haiti | MASS Design Group

Photo: Iwan Baan, www.iwan.com, courtesy AIA

 

The earthquake that hit Port-au-Prince in 2010 exacerbated Haiti’s already high prevalence of tuberculosis by destroying the country’s health infrastructure and interrupting patient treatments. This precipitated an outbreak of Multi-Drug Resistant Tuberculosis (MDR-TB), a highly contagious disease that requires treatment lasting up to 24 months. Patients remain infectious for the first 2-6 months of their treatment regimen, during which time they need to be hospitalized in isolation to prevent the spread of the disease.

Both infection control and patient trauma—from extended seclusion and because of the severe side effects of medication (which can include blindness, deafness, and emotional instability)—were driving factors in the design of the Tuberculosis Hospital for Les Centres GHESKIO. The new GHESKIO Tuberculosis Hospital replaced the previously destroyed facility at Signeau, providing TB patients an effective and dignified place to stay for the duration of their long-term treatment. Simple but effective methods of passive ventilation and infection control were used to reduce in-hospital transmission of TB in this high-risk population, as well as reduce energy costs for the facility.

 

Photo: Iwan Baan, www.iwan.com, courtesy AIA

Photo: Iwan Baan, www.iwan.com, courtesy AIA

Project attributes
Construction cost or anticipated construction cost: $2 million
Building area or anticipated building area: 14,000 sq ft
Construction start date or anticipated construction start date: June 2012
Substantial completion date or anticipated substantial completion date: March 2015

Project team
Construction Manager: GBS Group
Engineer -Civil: Fall Creek Engineering
Engineer - M/E: Berelec  
Engineer - Structural: CBI Consulting    
General Contractor: Chantiers d’Haiti  
Landscape Architect: MASS Design Group
Landscape Consultants: Jardins & Accessoires

 

 

 


Westlake Dermatology Concrete and Glass Pavilion, Marble Falls, Texas | Matt Fajkus Architecture

Photo: Charles Davis Smith, courtesy AIA

 

The Westlake Dermatology building stands out as a timeless frame in the rolling landscape, rather than appearing clinical or sterile. The medical and cosmetic dermatology practice was founded by Dr. Nikolaidis who believes great design serves as an inspiration for aesthetics. The facility in Marble Falls was a ground-up design project strengthened by a collaborative process directly with the clients and consultants. From a distance, the structure is a pavilion in the landscape, standing as a structure to behold in and of itself, but from in and round the building, it acts as deferential backdrop to function and as a frame for views beyond.

The nuanced concrete and glass shell merges with the designed landscape architecture, enveloping the bright and open interior in calm and quiet as one transitions from the road, through a garden zone, and into the space overlooking the rolling hills. Patient care and comfort are priorities – both influencing the design to embody feeling of security, ease, and solidity. Calibrated detail along with careful material selection result in a soothing and refreshing environment that is considerate of spatial and sensory experiences.

 

Photo: Charles Davis Smith, courtesy AIA

Photo: Charles Davis Smith, courtesy AIA

Project attributes
Construction cost or anticipated construction cost: $1.8 million
Building area or anticipated building area: 3,000 sq ft
Construction start date or anticipated construction start date: April 2016
Substantial completion date or anticipated substantial completion date: May 2017

Project team
Engineer - Civil: LJA Engineering
Engineer - MEP: DBR Engineering Consultants
Engineer - Structural: MJ Structures
Furniture Selection: Allison Burke Interior Design
General Contractor: Zapalac Reed    
Landscape Architect: Eden Garden Design

 

 

 

 

Category B - Built: More than $25 million (construction cost)

Casey House, Toronto, Canada | Hariri Pontarini Architects

Photo: Doublespace Photography, courtesy AIA

 

The renovation and extension to Casey House, a specialized healthcare facility for individuals living with HIV/AIDS, develops a new prototype for hospitals. The facility meets the needs of patients in a setting designed to evoke the experience and comforts of home. In order to create a comfortable, home-like user experience, the embrace emerged as a unifying theme—one of warmth, intimacy, comfort, privacy, connectivity, and solidity. The architecture is a physical manifestation of the embrace. The extension reaches over and around the existing heritage designated building, which has been restored, while the new addition—a robust, textured exterior— surrounds the central courtyard. The landscaped courtyard is visible from every corridor and in-patient room and, given the private nature of the facility, provides protected outdoor space.  

Once inside, the experience is about engagement of the old and new, and the organization—the embrace—around the courtyard, which is the ever-present symbol of life-affirming green, water, and light (trees, fountain, and sunlight). The living room, the central gathering space, featuring a two-story atrium, is anchored by a full-height fireplace crafted from Algonquin Limestone. A bridge connects the heritage and new spaces on the second floor with long views stretching from end to end.

 

Photo: Doublespace Photography, courtesy AIA

Photo: Doublespace Photography, courtesy AIA

Project attributes
Construction cost or anticipated construction cost: $30 million
Building area or anticipated building area: 59,000 sq ft
Construction start date or anticipated construction start date: March 2015
Substantial completion date or anticipated substantial completion date: September 2017

Project team
Acoustics: Swallow
Code Consultant: David Hine Engineering
Engineer - ME: WSP Canada
Engineer - Structural: Entuitive
Food Service: Kaizen Foodservice Planning
Heritage Consultant: ERA Architects
Landscape Architect:  Mark Hartley Landscape Architect  
Security: Mulvey & Banani  

 

 

 

 

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Palo Alto (VAPA) Polytrauma and Blind Rehabilitation Center, Palo Alto, California | SmithGroup and The Design Partnership LLP

Photo: Tim Griffith and Kyle Jeffers, courtesy AIA

 

The new VA Palo Alto (VAPA) Polytrauma and Blind Rehabilitation Center is one of only five polytrauma centers in the country designed specifically to serve and enhance the patient rehabilitation experience of polytrauma, blind and visually impaired veterans. At 174,000 square feet, it is not only the largest federal rehabilitation facility but also the only center to house polytrauma and blind rehabilitation services under one roof. 

The Center’s impactful approach to healing through design—where the environment itself is a tool for rehabilitation—provided the design team provided the team with multiple opportunities to improve the patient experience by designing for our senses—touch, movement, smell, taste, sight, hearing and balance. The evaluation of each design element against these human sensory metrics resulted in a more immersive and healing space for patients, staff and visitors alike.  The Polytrauma and Blind Rehabilitation Center exemplifies equity by design—minimizing barriers that patients face to maximize the potential for successful rehabilitation. The design integrates the latest advances in accessibility, universal design, and rehabilitation practices, resulting in a healthcare facility that aims to not only enhance patient recovery during their rehabilitation journey but long after.
 

Photo: Tim Griffith and Kyle Jeffers, courtesy AIA

Photo: Tim Griffith and Kyle Jeffers, courtesy AIA

Project attributes
Construction cost or anticipated construction cost: $600 million
Building area or anticipated building area: 174,000 sq ft
Construction start date or anticipated construction start date: October 2011
Substantial completion date or anticipated substantial completion date: November 2020 (estimated)

Project team
Acoustics: Charles M. Salter Associates, Inc.
Engineer - Civil: BKF Engineers
Engineer - Electrical: Guttmann & Blaevoet | Cammisa + Wipf
Engineer - Mechanical : Capital Engineering Consultants, Inc.
Engineer - Plumbing: Capital Engineering Consultants, Inc.
Engineer - Structural: Degenkolb Engineers
Geotechnical: Treadwell & Rollo, a Langan Company
Interiors: SmithGroup
Landscape Architects: Keller Mitchell & Co. | Royston Hanamoto Alley & Abey
Planning: SmithGroup        
Signage: Kate Keating Associates  
Technology: TEECOM

 

 

 

 

Category C - Renovations/Remodeled: Primarily built within existing hospital or clinical space or adaptive reuse of an existing building to a healthcare use.

Studio Dental II, San Francisco | Montalba Architects

Photo: Kevin Scott, courtesy AIA

 

Situated within a rapidly developing neighborhood in San Francisco’s financial district, the dentists’ brick and mortar location is defined by a modern aesthetic, while honoring the historic elements of the base building. This creates a transcendent environment that feels gallery-like and serene. The design centers on a conceptual ‘lantern’ within the dark building core, which communicates a sense of scale, luminescence, and transparency, and envelopes the series of operatories within. The lantern wall panels not only light up the dark building shell, but also glow through the storefront to brighten the street. The lantern provides patient privacy while engaging with the pedestrian street front, in an effort to energize the surrounding community.

In place of a common waiting room, a park-like bench extends the length of the space. Wood trellises provide separation between the bench and operatory rooms without closing off the space. Moments of material contrast are introduced between the rough shell walls, smoked mirror panels, and central colonnade of maple monoliths, which serve as functional storage and define the entry to each private patient room.

 

Photo: Kevin Scott, courtesy AIA

Photo: Kevin Scott, courtesy AIA

Project attributes
Construction cost or anticipated construction cost: Withheld per Client's request
Building area or anticipated building area: 1,400 sq ft
Construction start date or anticipated construction start date: November 2016
Substantial completion date or anticipated substantial completion date: June 2017

Project team
Engineer - MEP:  ACIES Engineering
Engineer - Structural: Julia Y. Chen Design Inc.
General Contractor: Build Group
Lighting: Sean O'Connor
Lighting Fabricator - Millwork: Pacific Westline, Inc.

 

READ MORE ABOUT THE 2019 Healthcare Design Awards
 

Related Stories

| Aug 11, 2010

Gafcon announces completion of Coronado animal care facility

Gafcon, a leading California-based construction management and consulting firm, announced today that construction is now complete on a new $1.6 million animal care facility located at 1395 First Street in Coronado, Calif.

| Aug 11, 2010

Colorado hospital wins LEED Gold

The main building of the Medical Center of the Rockies in Loveland, Colo., is a 136-bed regional medical center offering a full spectrum of services, with specialties in cardiac and trauma care. Constructed primarily of brick, native sandstone, and 85,000 sf of metal panels manufactured by Centria, the 600,000-sf main building, by Denver-based HLM Design, is one of the few hospitals in the nati...

| Aug 11, 2010

Biomedical center to join London's research scene

The UK Centre for Medical Research and Innovation, a partnership of scientific organizations researching new treatments for illnesses such as cancer and heart disease, hopes to attract leading medical scientists to its planned research center. Designed by HOK London, the building will be located on 3.

| Aug 11, 2010

Design ups comfort, care in cancer center

A new cancer center is slated to open in fall 2011 at Banner Gateway Medical Center, Gilbert, Ariz. The three-story, 120,000-sf, $107 million cancer center will contain physician clinics, medical imaging, radiation oncology, infusion therapy, and support services. A/E firm Cannon Design has created a visually open, column-free interior to increase patient comfort and care.

| Aug 11, 2010

Charlotte hospital expands its surgery capabilities

The Chicago office of RTKL designed Carolinas HealthCare System's Mercy Medical Plaza, Charlotte, N.C. The 150,000-sf hospital houses 12 operating rooms with expanded pre-operative and recovery space, a pharmacy, and a central sterile processing unit. Tenant space occupies 75,000 sf. RTKL mimicked the materials and mass of older buildings on the campus but created a more modern look by using ex...

| Aug 11, 2010

And the world's tallest building is…

At more than 2,600 feet high, the Burj Dubai (right) can still lay claim to the title of world's tallest building—although like all other super-tall buildings, its exact height will have to be recalculated now that the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH) announced a change to its height criteria.

| Aug 11, 2010

East meets West in hospital design

The Los Angeles office of HMC Architects and the Chinese firm Shunde Architectural Design Institute won the commission to design the 2.15 million-sf First People's Hospital in the Shunde District of Foshan, China. The team's winning concept organizes a series of buildings around a dynamic, curved spine element to create an interior “eco-atrium” with outdoor green space and healing g...

| Aug 11, 2010

MOB added to new hospital project

A late-2009 ground breaking is planned for a $20 million medical office building on the grounds of the $211 million, 106-bed Loma Linda University Medical Center in Murrieta, Calif., which itself is under construction. Minneapolis-based Frauenshuh HealthCare Real Estate Solutions is developing the five-story, 160,000-sf MOB, which will accommodate 60 physician offices.

| Aug 11, 2010

Rehabilitation center helps patients transition

Construction is under way on the Polytrauma Transitional Rehabilitation Center on the VA Medical Center campus in Richmond, Va. The $8 million, 22,000-sf facility will provide physical therapy, housing, and education to veterans as part of their transition back into their communities. The center was designed by HDR, Alexandria, Va.

| Aug 11, 2010

Medical office building planned in Fort Worth, Texas

Dallas-based TGS Architects has unveiled its design for the five-story, 130,000-sf Plaza Medical Office Building, planned for Fort Worth, Texas. The Class A development will include space for orthopedic care, surgery, breast center, diagnostic imaging, cardiovascular, and rehabilitation therapy services.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category


Healthcare Facilities

Advancing Healthcare: Medical Office Buildings at the Forefront of Access and Safety

This article explores the pivotal shift from traditional hospital settings to Medical Office Buildings (MOBs), focusing on how these facilities enhance patient access. Discover the key drivers of this transformation, including technological advancements, demographic trends, and a growing emphasis on integrated, patient-centered care. Learn how MOBs are not only adapting to modern healthcare demands but are also leveraging modern access control and safety innovations.



halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021