ArchShowcase Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination. BioCruces Institute Headquarters in Barakaldo, Spain by IDOMMarch 4th, 2019 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: IDOM BioCruces is the Medical Research Institute of the Cruces Teaching Hospital, a healthcare reference within the Basque Country, with a solid history of teaching and research. Its goals include the promotion, cohesion and support of research groups that make up the Institute in order to develop quality translational research and promote effective innovation and collaboration with other entities. Up until the construction of the new facility, the institute carried out its activity within the general services building of the Cruces hospital, also designed by IDOM. Part of its activity will continue to run there, aside from the new building, its purpose complementary to the main operation.
The New Headquarters of the BioCruces Institute is a new-build building destined to house the research areas and animal facilities. The programme is distributed over 8 floors, 3 of which are basements. Above ground level, the floorplan is divided into two blocks of laboratories (North and South blocks), separated by a block of common areas on the East elevation and the communications core which is adjacent to the West façade. The latter is the least attractive one from a usage point of view since running parallel to it, less than six meters away, there is another hospital building of similar height. Therefore, this façade’s sightlines and sunlight are at a disadvantage. So, the better areas were set aside for laboratories, the assembly room and the resting areas. The location of the communications core on the West façade would make it possible for the neighbouring building and this one to become connected, like in other buildings of the hospital complex. Being a building for laboratories, in continuous change, and with new techniques and technology appearing every day, it was considered that the building should have great flexibility so that it could adapt to possible future changes. With the exception of common cores, shafts and fire zones, the building was designed with modular systems that allow for an easy compartmentation and access to the building services in both ceilings and walls. Ceilings have a dropped and sliding system that improves accessibility to building services for maintenance, minimising daily activity. The building has a great central gallery for building services, entirely accessible from common areas, which results in the ease of maintenance and the adaptation of the building, therefore also reducing the impact on the activity of research. Another key to the building was the engineering behind the building services which have a repercussion and complexity far greater than those of a normal laboratory. Redundant services were foreseen for all those systems that are essential to the building’s activity. A great cool room on every floor was included, to be shared by the adjacent laboratories and with direct and independent access from them. Underground, the required programme occupied the entire floorplan, leaving the last basement for building services that would not put the building’s activity at risk. Above ground space was sacrificed to house electrical rooms or DPCs, key elements to the centre’s operation. The construction of the building was conditioned by the plot, being only just big enough for a building of these characteristics. Hence, the building is stretched to the very limits of the regulations, leaving the East façade, the building’s main elevation, just fourteen meters away from a twelve-storey high block of flats. The West and South elevations are just 6 meters away from other buildings in the complex. The North façade has greater amplitude and is limited by one of the entrances to the hospital facility. The small distance between the adjacent buildings – erected without basements over landfills –, the scarce space for supplies and settling due to the hospital being at the top of its capacity and the access to the plot being through a neighbourhood of narrow streets and very sharp turns made the construction process very difficult indeed. Despite the available space being very limited, the basement walls were built using a hydromill trench cutter, which meant that retainment was achieved prior to the excavation, something which was essential in order not to jeopardise the foundations of the closest buildings. From a formal point of view, the building was so limited volume-wise that strategies focused on the formalisation of a curtain-wall type façade, where a dense weave of slats offers protection from direct sunlight and sightlines from neighbouring buildings. This sieve was reinforced by a subtle serigraphy of white dots on the glass which grant more privacy to the inside even without the use of roman blinds. Only in singular areas like vestibules or resting areas was this reticule interrupted to give way to big windows which would prove its different character. The building’s image was reinforced by the colour white, contrasting with the environment and offering a sober and aseptic image. This strategy was extrapolated to the plot’s fencing in order to unite the building to the other laboratory block of the hospital, resulting in a research terminal within the hospital complex. Interior spaces follow the storyline started by the façade, white and light colours filling the building so that working areas are well illuminated and pleasant. These spaces contrast with the wood in the main vestibule and the resting room, which grant them greater representativeness and warmth. Occasionally, colour plays a role inside the building to offer relevant information to its users. For example, some black rings are located in the middle of the main corridors in order to help users get their bearings, also indicating what floor they are on. Access to the animal facility and the surgical block takes place through a red ring which slows users down and warns them they are entering an area with greater security levels. Cryogenics rooms are lined with backlit blue glass, which could resemble the ice of a glacier. Emergency showers are located in yellow cubicles that reinforce their presence. Share this:RelatedContact IDOM
Categories: Educational Institute, Headquarters, Health Research centre, Institute, Medical Center, Research & Development Centre This entry was posted on Monday, March 4th, 2019 at 6:50 am. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site. |