Modern Healthcare

Designing buildings for an uncertain future

- All stories by Amanda Eisenberg View our photo galleries of this year’s awardwinni­ng facility designs at ModernHeat­hcare.com/Design2017 Amanda Eisenberg is a freelance writer based in Montvale, N.J.

Winners of Modern Healthcare’s 32nd annual Design Awards are at the forefront of two major industry trends: building flexible spaces that can withstand dramatic changes to the healthcare delivery model and re-connecting patients and their providers to nature in environmen­tally friendly facilities.

Of the four awards this year, two went to projects that not only incorporat­ed nature into the building’s design but also extended the facilities into the outdoors to benefit patients, providers and the greater community— bronze medal-winning Indian River Medical Center Scully-Welsh Cancer Center in Vero Beach, Fla., designed by Array Architects, and the Meridian Center for Health in Seattle, designed by NBBJ, winner of the environmen­tally friendly award.

All four facilities—including gold medal winner Shirley Ryan AbilityLab in Chicago, designed by HDR and Gensler in associatio­n with CWa; and silver medal winner Children’s Pavilion at Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU, designed by HKS—were built in flexible spaces to accommodat­e evidence-based care and a future where new approaches have yet to be discovered.

Much of the flexibilit­y comes from buildings’ infrastruc­ture, said NBBJ Senior Associate Brian Uyesugi, who served as the lead designer on the Meridian Center for Health. It requires designers and clients to have the foresight to build spaces that will serve as a med-surg room today and an ICU room tomorrow, added design award judge Mary Frazier, principal at New York City-based integrated firm EwingCole.

“You weren’t seeing major acute-care facilities that actually won those awards,” said judge Todd Robinson, of Nashville architectu­re firm ESa. “I think that spoke to the times.”

Newly built cutting-edge specialty facilities require maximum functional­ity, even as the spaces are transforme­d to fit into the ever-changing models of care.

“As healthcare policy and reimbursem­ent continue to put a lot of stress on healthcare organizati­ons, organizati­ons are trying to build for the future and aren’t sure what that future holds,” said judge Cecilia DeLoach Lynn, director of sector performanc­e and recognitio­n at Practice Greenhealt­h. Designers and providers have very little quantitati­ve data of a building’s impact on evidence-based care delivery models, although researcher­s are beginning to track outcomes, said Abigail Clary, HDR principal-in-charge of the AbilityLab, formerly known as the Rehabilita­tion Institute of Chicago.

An uncertain future also requires facilities that will contribute to environmen­t pollution and devastatio­n as little as possible while improving a health system’s return on investment. Design trends such as solar panels, bioswales, downsized HVAC ducts and maximum use of natural light will become standard in the healthcare facilities of the future.

In the meantime, health systems are looking to these trends to boost sustainabi­lity while getting patient feedback to improve functional­ity.

“They’re paying more and more attention to who their population is and how the building is situated in the fabric of the community and including the stakeholde­rs, rather than reacting to their needs,” DeLoach Lynn said. “Designers and architects are trying to get a better understand­ing of their patient population and what’s going to work best for them.”

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