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'Building to Heal': New exhibition explores the future of healthcare architecture

By Niall Patrick Walsh|

Friday, Jun 23, 2023

Kreiskrankenhaus Agatharied © Nickl & Partner, Foto: Stefan Müller-Naumann

The Architekturmuseum der TUM (Pinakothek der Moderne) in Munich, Germany, is to launch an exhibition on hospital design. Titled Building to Heal: New Architecture for Hospitals, the show is intended as “an impulse and stimulus for this rethinking,” with three sections comprising the themes: Experiment, Evidence, and Exchange.

“Hospital architecture as a building typology has a long and complex history of development, driven by rapid medical advances,” the organizers said in a statement about the exhibition. “In the twentieth century, the factors of efficiency, economy, flexibility, and rationalization increasingly dominated planning and design. Clinics have thus mutated into highly technical machines.”

Friendship Hospital Satkhira © Kashef Chowdhury/URBANA, Foto: Asif Salman

“Essential needs and feelings of patients and caregivers have been pushed into the background, and the resulting psycho-social consequences are severe,” the organizers added. “However, approaches related to 'healing architecture,' which originated in North America and has also been successfully adapted in Europe, have provided the impetus in recent years to reform healthcare design and to place people back in the focus of design and planning.”

Bürgerspital Solothurn © Silvia Gmür Reto Gmür Architekten, Foto: Ralph Feiner

The exhibition will focus on the evidence-based design of hospitals and seven ‘environmental variables’ which can influence patients: Orientation, Odorscape, Soundscape, Privacy and Withdrawal, Power Points, View and Foresight, and Human Scale. 

Isala Meppel © Vakwerk Architecten, Foto: Leon van der Velden

Projects on display will include the Agatharied District Hospital (Nickl und Partner Architekten, 1998), the Friendship Hospital Satkhira (Kashef Chowdhury/URBANA, 2018), and the Princess Máxima Center for Pediatric Oncology in Utrecht (LIAG architects + engineers, 2018).

Prinses Máxima Centrum Utrecht © LIAG und MMEK', Foto: Ewout Huibers

The exhibition’s third space, the forum, will invite visitors into a dialogue on the future of hospitals, with lectures, debates, and workshops. A library and film contributions will also be supported, as will a series of installations titled MAKING SENSE by the Norwegian artist and olfactory researcher Sissel Tolaas.

The exhibition will be open from July 12th to January 21, 2024.

RELATED EVENT Building to Heal: New Architecture for Hospitals
RELATED NEWS Ph.D student from the University of Kansas School of Architecture wins the Joseph G. Sprague New Investigator Award for healthcare design

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exhibition ● munich ● germany ● healthcare architecture ● hospital design ● event ● europe
Technische Universität München
Technische Universität München
URBANA
URBANA

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'Building to Heal': New exhibition explores the future of healthcare architecture

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'Building to Heal': New exhibition explores the future of healthcare architecture

By Niall Patrick Walsh|

Friday, Jun 23, 2023

Share

Kreiskrankenhaus Agatharied © Nickl & Partner, Foto: Stefan Müller-Naumann

Related

exhibition ● munich ● germany ● healthcare architecture ● hospital design ● event ● europe
Technische Universität München
Technische Universität München
URBANA
URBANA

The Architekturmuseum der TUM (Pinakothek der Moderne) in Munich, Germany, is to launch an exhibition on hospital design. Titled Building to Heal: New Architecture for Hospitals, the show is intended as “an impulse and stimulus for this rethinking,” with three sections comprising the themes: Experiment, Evidence, and Exchange.

“Hospital architecture as a building typology has a long and complex history of development, driven by rapid medical advances,” the organizers said in a statement about the exhibition. “In the twentieth century, the factors of efficiency, economy, flexibility, and rationalization increasingly dominated planning and design. Clinics have thus mutated into highly technical machines.”

Friendship Hospital Satkhira © Kashef Chowdhury/URBANA, Foto: Asif Salman

“Essential needs and feelings of patients and caregivers have been pushed into the background, and the resulting psycho-social consequences are severe,” the organizers added. “However, approaches related to 'healing architecture,' which originated in North America and has also been successfully adapted in Europe, have provided the impetus in recent years to reform healthcare design and to place people back in the focus of design and planning.”

Bürgerspital Solothurn © Silvia Gmür Reto Gmür Architekten, Foto: Ralph Feiner

The exhibition will focus on the evidence-based design of hospitals and seven ‘environmental variables’ which can influence patients: Orientation, Odorscape, Soundscape, Privacy and Withdrawal, Power Points, View and Foresight, and Human Scale. 

Isala Meppel © Vakwerk Architecten, Foto: Leon van der Velden

Projects on display will include the Agatharied District Hospital (Nickl und Partner Architekten, 1998), the Friendship Hospital Satkhira (Kashef Chowdhury/URBANA, 2018), and the Princess Máxima Center for Pediatric Oncology in Utrecht (LIAG architects + engineers, 2018).

Prinses Máxima Centrum Utrecht © LIAG und MMEK', Foto: Ewout Huibers

The exhibition’s third space, the forum, will invite visitors into a dialogue on the future of hospitals, with lectures, debates, and workshops. A library and film contributions will also be supported, as will a series of installations titled MAKING SENSE by the Norwegian artist and olfactory researcher Sissel Tolaas.

The exhibition will be open from July 12th to January 21, 2024.

RELATED EVENT Building to Heal: New Architecture for Hospitals
RELATED NEWS Ph.D student from the University of Kansas School of Architecture wins the Joseph G. Sprague New Investigator Award for healthcare design

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