Norwegian medical training facility designed “not to look like a hospital”

Movie: in our next exclusive interview from Inside Festival, Per Anders Borgen of Ratio Architects explains how the design team used raw materials to “remove the institutional look” from the interior of a student facility at St. Olav’s Hospital in Trondheim, Norway.

Knowledge Cente at St Olavs Hospital in Trondheim , Norway, by Ratio Architects and Nordic Office of Architecture

The Knowledge Centre by Norwegian studios Ratio Architects and Nordic Office of Architecture is a medical student research, training and teaching facility at St. Olav’s Hospital in Trondheim. It won the health category at last month’s Inside Festival.

Knowledge Cente at St Olavs Hospital in Trondheim , Norway, by Ratio Architects and Nordic Office of Architecture

The outside of the building features a black and white glass facade, designed together with artist Anne Aanerud, which provides shade from the sun as well as decoration.

“Architecture and sunshading form the facade and the expression of the building,” Borgen explains. “That is connected to a very high demand on energy reduction.”

Knowledge Cente at St Olavs Hospital in Trondheim , Norway, by Ratio Architects and Nordic Office of Architecture

Inside, the architects chose to leave much of the building’s wood and concrete structure exposed.

“Because this is very much a university building, we tried to keep it a little bit rough,” Borgen says. “In hospitals you [usually] have all these clinical, sterile materials. We tried to avoid that.”

Knowledge Cente at St Olavs Hospital in Trondheim , Norway, by Ratio Architects and Nordic Office of Architecture

“We wanted to use natural wood and concrete. The construction is the interior and that’s part of our concept.”

Knowledge Cente at St Olavs Hospital in Trondheim , Norway, by Ratio Architects and Nordic Office of Architecture

Patient wards and visitor areas, as well as the student library and cafeteria, feature specially commissioned art works painted on the walls.

Knowledge Cente at St Olavs Hospital in Trondheim , Norway, by Ratio Architects and Nordic Office of Architecture

“We were trying to remove the institutional look,” Borgen explains. “I don’t think a hospital needs to look like a hospital. That is a convention you can challenge as an architect.”

Knowledge Cente at St Olavs Hospital in Trondheim , Norway, by Ratio Architects and Nordic Office of Architecture

“It’s very hard because you have all kinds of demands that force you to do something. But [the Knowledge Centre] is an attempt to make a good building with function and good form joined together. It’s not different from every other architectural concept or task in that sense.”

Per Anders Borgen of Ratio Architects
Per Anders Borgen of Ratio Architects. Copyright: Dezeen

This movie was filmed at Inside Festival 2013, which took place at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore from 2 to 4 October. The next Inside Festival will take place at the same venue from 1 to 3 October 2014. Award entries are open February to June 2014.

The post Norwegian medical training facility designed
“not to look like a hospital”
appeared first on Dezeen.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

This student housing block in Norway by MEK Architects is named MySpace, as the architects imagined the building as a social network where each of the 116 residents can get to know one another (+ slideshow).

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: photograph is by Matthias Herzog

MEK Architects, comprising Spanish studio Murado & Elvira and architect Enrique Krahe, designed the housing block for the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim as part of the Europan housing design competition.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: photograph is by Matthias Herzog

Rather than group the building into separate apartments, the team decided to create large social areas that would unite every student, including a large lounge and a shared kitchen where everyone has their own separate storage area and fridge.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

“The shared kitchen is the space where common life is negotiated,” explain architects Juan Elvira, Clara Murado and Enrique Krahe, and they describe how this ground floor space is used for social activities such as pancake contests and cooking seminars.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

A lounge occupies most of the first floor and is divided into different areas, which students are encouraged to customise to suit their day-to-day activities.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: photograph is by Matthias Herzog

“The building can be looked upon as something that is unfinished, because it calls for permanent completion by its inhabitants in the search for a more satisfying community life,” say the architects.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Bedrooms line one edge of this lounge and also fill the four floors above, while study areas are positioned in the corridors and on balcony terraces, allowing students to easily work in groups.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

The building is located at the end of two existing housing blocks and copies the roof pitches of its neighbours.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

The facade is clad with pine and is painted in shades of grey and black.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Other student housing projects on Dezeen include a building modelled on a stack of baskets and a tower block with a patchwork of brown panelling on its facade.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

See more stories about student housing »

Photography is by Miguel de Guzman, apart from where otherwise stated.

Here’s an explanation from MEK Architects:


‘MySpace’ student’s housing in Trondheim (Norway) is the outcome of a winning entry of Europan 9 by MEK Architects, Clara Murado, Juan Elvira and Enrique Krahe. The competition brief called for a student house between the Nidelva River and the main University Campus.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

MySpace residence proposes the compression, transfer and conditioning of the relational capacities of urban space. Soon the client (a student-run association named SIT that looks after student room availability) showed the need to fit in some extra 40% rooms within the original volume, also lowering the already tight budget.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: photograph is by Matthias Herzog

Assuming the existing urban conditions, the student housing detaches as much as possible from the surrounding buildings and shapes its volume in order to extract potential from the views and sun. Open-air terraces are spread around the building. Through them, students can experience outside conditions and relate with the city and the far views.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

In order to stress a local initiative that intends to promote Trondheim as a wood-friendly city, and also seeking new challenges about wood use in large buildings, the entire exterior volume of the building is cladded with fir (pine) wooden planks, displaying different treatments, compositions and layouts.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

As a result of a special regulation that considers Elgesetergate as a road instead a street, no windows for rooms are allowed to be opened on that elevation. The front and the rear are thus conceived as thick containing membranes, while only corridors and lounge are able to look over the street.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

The core of the building contains a multipurpose lounge with no hierarchy, or spatial definition, in which different ambiances are located. Room floors surround this lounge. The general layout is articulated by stripes occupying the space as they approach or distance the existing limits. Rooms mimic the building’s internal scheme, structured in functional bands (storage, prefabricated bathroom and a bed).

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Since the construction started, and more details about the building were made public, a vibrant debate arose among residents-to be in specialized blogs and social networks. Architecture has still a long path to explore collecting data and seeking ways of transferring feedback into the making, just as information architects or videogame designers would do.

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: ground floor plan – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: first floor plan – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: second and third floor plan – click above for larger image

Above: fourth floor plan – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: fifth floor plan – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: roof plan – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: cross section – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: cross section evacuation stairs – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: cross section – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: longitudinal section – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: south elevation – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: east elevation – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: north elevation – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: east elevation – click above for larger image

MySpace student housing in Trondheim by MEK Architects

Above: exploded axonometric diagrams – click above for larger image

The post MySpace student housing in Trondheim
by MEK Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.

Leüthens Kulturhage by Henning Larsen Architects and Gullik Gulliksen

Kulturhage by Henning Larsen Architects

Danish architects Henning Larsen and Norwegian landscape architect Gullik Gulliksen have won a competition to design municipal offices and a public square in Trondheim, Norway.

Kulturhage by Henning Larsen Architects

Proposed for the southwest area of Leüthens, the project is entitled Leüthens Kulturhage, which translates as “Leüthen’s cultural garden”, and will also include a theatre and cinema.

Kulturhage by Henning Larsen Architects

Inside the office block, displaced floors accommodating meeting areas and balconies will overlook a large atrium that will face the new square.

Kulturhage by Henning Larsen Architects

The project is expected to complete in 2015.

This year Henning Larsen Architects also completed a concert hall in Iceland – see that project here.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Henning Larsen Architects and the Norwegian landscape architect Gullik Gulliksen have won the international competition for a new urban district in Trondheim city centre.

Kulturhage by Henning Larsen Architects

With an innovative, open office building and a new cinema next to the city theatre, the project proposal titled ‘Leüthens Kulturhage’ – ‘Leüthen’s Cultural Garden’ – will bring new life to the area. The building will spearhead the development of green public buildings in Norway. Centered around a new square, the two buildings will create a common identity for the area and bring together the existing educational and cultural institutions.

Kulturhage by Henning Larsen Architects

A unanimous jury selected Henning Larsen Architects’ project as winner of the competition in which a number of Danish and Norwegian architecture studios participated. The jury emphasised the winning proposal’s use of the site potential and interaction with the city and surrounding buildings.

Kulturhage by Henning Larsen Architects

The project covers a total of 39,000 m2 and is expected to be completed during 2015. Henning Larsen Architects has worked in Norway for many years. In 1978, Trondheim University (today called The Norwegian University of Science and Technology) at Dragvoll was inaugurated. Currently, the company is working on a new commercial domicile in Oslo.