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Circle Bath Building, Hospital, Architect, News, England, Development, Design, Photo, Opening
Circle Bath, England, UK : Information + Images
The Centre of Clinical Excellence by Foster + Partners
Circle Bath, Bath, UK
2006-09
Foster + Partners
14 Jan 2010
CircleBath, opening of the first hospital
designed by Foster + Partners
CircleBath is Foster + Partners first hospital and the first
in a programme of new independent hospitals which offer a radical
departure from orthodox approaches to hospital planning. After a
period of commissioning, CircleBath is expected to open to patients
in February.
images : Nigel Young_Foster + Partners
The compact design encourages a sense of community and well-being
with facilities more comparable to a luxury hotel rather than a
traditional hospital. The three-storey hospital is set into the
hills on the edge of protected green belt nine kilometres south
east of Bath. It is planned around a central light filled atrium,
promoting a sense of orientation and intimacy that is commonly lacking
in larger hospitals.
Public entry is from the road on the north directly into the atrium
on the ground level floor. The northern façade comprises
dark panelling at the lower levels, while on the south, extensive
glazing opens out to views over the surrounding rolling countryside.
Appearing to float above this recessive skirting, the rectangular
upper volume and roof, enclosing all twenty-eight bedrooms, is clad
in a reflective lattice of aluminium shingles.
The double-height atrium forms the focus for patients, staff and visitors,
with private consultation rooms leading from it at ground level and
in-patient bedrooms arranged around it above. The main reception point,
café and nurses station occupy the atrium where daylight,
drawn through the circular sky lights, is softened by a translucent
fabric ribbon tracing the shapes. The colour palette is a warm and
friendly mix of ochre and rust, with natural wood acoustic panels
above, interspersed with glass panels providing a visual connection
to the atrium from the bedroom floor.
Throughout the building, there is an emphasis on natural light
and views: operating theatres and recovery spaces on the lower level
are fully glazed to the south, looking out on to a private garden.
The bedrooms on the upper floor look out onto balconies, planted
with herbs and shrubs, lining the buildings perimeter and
oriented to maximise views across the countryside. Sympathetic landscaping
emphasises the therapeutic natural environment to create the opposite
of an institutional atmosphere.
Divisions between departments are minimal, easing the stress involved
in consultation, treatment and recovery for patients and reducing
walking distances for staff.
Spencer de Grey, Head of Design at Foster + Partners, commented:
There is a wealth of evidence to suggest that a well-designed
hospital environment can reduce recovery times and contribute to
better outcomes for patients, while providing a more attractive
workplace for medical staff. This is Foster + Partners first
hospital building and its design is democratic, putting the patient
at the heart of the system in a space that does not feel institutionalised
and instead takes advantage of the rural setting, the light and
the views.
Images online later today
Circle Bath information from Foster + Partners
Previously:

The Centre of Clinical Excellence in Bath is the first of a series
of hospitals which are designed to place patients at the centre of
a new approach to healthcare: everyone (whether a surgeon, nurse or
porter) is a partner in the delivery of care. The architectural ambition
is to re-cast the hospital building as a humane and civilised space.
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Circle Bath design
: Foster + Partners
Bath Buildings
The project is the first of a chain of health campuses across the UK commissioned
by Health Properties for Circle, a privately funded initiative that places
patients at the centre of a new approach to healthcare. Circle is an employee-owned
group of 1,200 clinicians and hospital workers organised along the lines
of John Lewis Partnership.
The building provides operating theatres, bedrooms, consultation, treatment
and recovery spaces, and offers both in-patient and out-patient accommodation.
Patients will be treated irrespective of whether they are paid for by
private insurance or through the National Health Service (NHS) under the
UK Governments Choose and Book scheme.
Everyone in the hospital whether a surgeon, nurse or porter
is regarded as a partner in the delivery of health care, with
a common goal of promoting patient well-being.
Bath University Building
Bath Spa development
Grimshaw Architects

photograph : Edmund Sumner
Bath Spa
Holburne Museum of Art
Eric Parry Architects

Holburne Museum CGI : image by Smoothe from Eric Parry
Architects
Holburne Museum of Art Bath
James Dyson Design School
Wilkinson Eyre

Dyson School of Design
Innovation
English Architect Studios

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the Avon Architecture page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Circl Bath - page : adrian welch / isabelle
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