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Case Study

LUMINOUS OPEN INTERIORS DEFINE 3XN’S ADDITION TO THE LARGEST HOSPITAL IN DENMARK’S CAPITAL

- WORDS _Evan Pavka PHOTOS _Adam Mørk

An addition by 3XN to Denmark’s biggest hospital lends light, clarity and privacy to the healing process

Architectu­re shapes behaviour. This ethos, which drives each of Danish studio 3XN’S projects, is central to the new North Wing of Copenhagen’s Rigshospit­alet. Occupying a narrow site in the northern quadrant of the over-250-year-old institutio­n’s campus, the seven-storey, Jura stone–clad structure leverages a number of simple yet effective moves. Its zigzagging footprint, for one, allows ample natural light to enter deep into the interior while housing 209 patient rooms along the resulting darting corridors (196 of them are private to foster more visitor interactio­n during the healing process). A central walkway bisects the core of the 54,000-square-metre hospital, creating clear sightlines and shorter travel distances as the building gracefully steps down toward its southeaste­rn apex. In this sense, “the hospital becomes a bit like a city,” says 3XN partner Stig Vesterager Gothelf, with “local streets” connected to “these other amenities.”

Two soaring atriums further tie the building together, foreground­ing access, clarity and transparen­cy for staff and visitors alike. A curated public art program fills these areas while shaping the facility’s overall wayfinding. For instance, the tonal shifts in artist Malene Landgreen’s geometric installati­on enveloping one sinuous stairway are carried through in the chromatic hues on each of the floors: cool blue running along the operating facilities, shifting to warm yellow and orange shades for patient spaces above. “When you go to the hospital, it’s often a very small environmen­t,” Gothelf says, “and you don’t know how much of the building you really see. We wanted to make it as transparen­t as possible.” Open offices for doctors and medical staff also help achieve a more porous interior that, in turn, informs the way they conduct their work.

Flexibilit­y was ultimately paramount, with entire wings of patient rooms given the capacity to reprogram as required (a feature that proved essential during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic). Overall, it’s a welcoming, luminous and resilient take on the architectu­re of healing — one that may even help build a new kind of medicine. “The more transparen­cy we achieve, the more generous the spaces,” says Gothelf of both the patient and institutio­nal experience­s. “It’s something that affects the culture.” 3xn.com

 ??  ?? In the recently completed North Wing of Copenhagen’s Rigshospit­alet, a zigzagging plan allows for an increased amount of natural light to flood the interior while also providing panoramic views to Faelledpar­ken, the city’s largest park.
Each of the almost 200 private patient rooms is fitted with refined solid wood furnishing­s by the Lindner Group to help “create those structures that you have in your home,” says 3XN partner Stig Vesterager Gothelf. “In the interior, it’s important to have furniture that can support visitors. We know that people heal better when they have their family with them.”
In the recently completed North Wing of Copenhagen’s Rigshospit­alet, a zigzagging plan allows for an increased amount of natural light to flood the interior while also providing panoramic views to Faelledpar­ken, the city’s largest park. Each of the almost 200 private patient rooms is fitted with refined solid wood furnishing­s by the Lindner Group to help “create those structures that you have in your home,” says 3XN partner Stig Vesterager Gothelf. “In the interior, it’s important to have furniture that can support visitors. We know that people heal better when they have their family with them.”
 ??  ?? The “robustness” of the hospital is thanks in part to the pale Jura stone facade, which “gives it a kind of safe feeling,” according to Gothelf. In contrast to a more convention­al approach, the rhythmic angular gestures grant a distinctiv­e character to the overall building, done in close collaborat­ion with LINK Arkitektur and engineerin­g firm Sweco.
The “robustness” of the hospital is thanks in part to the pale Jura stone facade, which “gives it a kind of safe feeling,” according to Gothelf. In contrast to a more convention­al approach, the rhythmic angular gestures grant a distinctiv­e character to the overall building, done in close collaborat­ion with LINK Arkitektur and engineerin­g firm Sweco.

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