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.
“Pharmacy of the Future”, Schultheiss Quartier Berlin in Germany by Studio Aisslinger
April 23rd, 2019 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: Studio Aisslinger
“Pharmacy of the Future“
STUDIO AISSLINGER at Schultheiss Quartier Berlin
A pharmacy has always been a special place to go to. Everybody knows the image of the whitedressed pharmacist in front of dark-wood shelfs and drawer units covering the walls from floor to ceiling. Personal contact and individual advise make part of this image, holding memories of the real world experience a visit to the apothecary once was.
Digitalization did not only dissipate the face-to-face relation to the chemists; the visual appearance and the haptic dimension of the pharmacy space changed and even vanished altogether. Today, hundreds of online shops deliver drugs directly to your doorstep; a service fitting well the tendency of our time. The marginalization of the analog, the growing virtualization of quotidian life and the trend to limit communication to instant messaging accounts and chatrooms indicate the ongoing reorganization of the human world according to the ideal of an all-encompassing functional optimization.
Against this tendency STUDIO AISSLINGER creates spaces that don’t deny the opportunities of digitalization and yet secure the possibility of true sociability through their analog, haptic and visual quality; spaces of unpretentious co-existence with most advanced technologies.
The pharmacy at Schultheiss Quartier Berlin rediscovers the experience of a place, where people liked to go and felt secure to ask for help, whose aura instilled trust and demonstrated the souvereignty of up-to date science and technology.
Natural colors make clients feel snug and safe. The spatial concept follows the idea of free and unrestricted movement: No counter predetermines where the customer must go, no barrier gets in his way. Casual seating allows to sit and rest, walls made of glass bricks turn the strict separation between dispensary and laboratory translucid. Nothing is hidden. The automatic drug storage is placed central in the shop, allowing the client to observe robot technology at work: a speedy grabber moves up and down the shelfs, picking and delivering with precision the medicine selected by the pharmacist for each specific treatment.
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