AIA National Healthcare Design Award Winner: Shenzhen Third People's Hospital
November 5, 2008Web Seminar
12 p.m. ET
Register now
This Web seminar is part of a four part series presented by the Vendome
Group in conjunction with the AIA Academy of Architecture for
Health, that will explore winners of the 2008 AIA National Healthcare Design
Awards.
Shenzhen Third People's Hospital
Demand
for better health care facilities in China has increased, resulting
in a wave of new hospital construction. Chinese hospitals have
typically been designed as narrow buildings with low floor-to-floor
heights that relied on natural ventilation. These building forms
accommodated important aspects of traditional Chinese design but
they were cold and damp in winter, hot and humid in summer.
Contemporary Western designs, with large floor plates and high
floor-to-floor heights, are more comfortable and efficient but are
less culturally appropriate in China. The design team created a
hospital that blended traditional Chinese forms with Western
technology. The design solution is a campus with a linear spine and
a series of narrow buildings that are curved to capture sunlight
and channel the winds. Although the buildings will have internal
mechanical systems consistent with those found in U.S. hospitals to
halt the spread of infection, the campus organization locates
infectious patients downwind and offers them the natural healing
power of sunlight and serene garden views. The building is situated
so it has prevailing southeasterly winds; therefore, the
noninfectious zone is at the south end of the campus with the
semi-infectious zone in the center and the infectious zone at the
north.
Speakers
David A. Rhodes, FAIA, Vice President and Principal, TRO
Jung|Brannen
David A. Rhodes, FAIA, vice president/principal of TRO
Jung|Brannen, has 41 years of experience leading the facility
planning, programming, and design of health care projects for major
health care systems, specialty hospitals, academic medical centers,
and teaching hospitals and in the United States and abroad. Since
1993 he has been responsible for leading TRO Jung|Brannens
efforts in Asia, completing the design of over fifteen
International hospitals in Shenzhen, Nanjing, Hangzhou, Xiamen,
Tianjin, Chongqing, Chengdu, and Shanghai, China.
Eduard Scharff Jr., AIA, Associate Principal, TRO
Jung|Brannen
Eduard Scharff Jr., AIA, associate principal of TRO Jung|Brannen,
has over 35 years of experience in the planning and design of
high-tech medical facilities in the United States and abroad. He
has been instrumental in the development of TRO Jung|Brannens
international projects, and is currently working on the design of
numerous medical facility projects in the Asian market,
specifically in Shenzhen, Nanjing, Tianjin and Chengdu, China.
Eduard has also worked on large-scale projects in the Middle
East.
Anne Schopf, FAIA, Awards Panel Judge
Anne Schopf, FAIA, is partner and director of design at Mahlum
Architects. She has provided design leadership for the firms
diverse practice in health care, education, housing, and commercial
markets. Under Annes direction, the firms work has been
recognized with two consecutive Top Ten Green Project awards by the
AIA Committee on the Environment (COTE) and 45 AIA and IIDA design
awards at the local, regional and national levels. Significant
projects include Providence Newberg Medical Center in Oregon, the
first LEED Gold hospital in the nation, and Norton Sound Regional
Hospital in Nome, Alaska.





