Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona and Luis Castillo

Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

Waiting rooms inside this red-striped health centre by architects Miguel Barahona and Luis Castillo overlook the Sierra de Gardor mountains in southern Spain.

Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

The two-storey Consultorio en La Envía is set into the sloping landscape beside a housing development.

Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

The red panelled exterior of the centre contrasts with the earthy tones of the surrounding vernacular architecture.

Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

A glass-walled courtyard creates a light well at the heart of the building.

Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

Consulting rooms for GPs, paediatricians and nurses are located at the back of the building whilst storage areas are provided in the basement.

Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

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Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

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Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

Photography is by Fernando Alda – see more photographs on his website.

Here are some more details from Barahona:


La Envía Health Center in La Envía

La Envia Golf is a housing development lying in the foothills of the Sierra of Gádor. Leaving behind the Sea of Plastic, the great expanses of plastic-cloaked greenhouses of Western Almería, the road slopes up towards 2,000-metershigh mountains through a rugged landscape with barely trace of vegetation. In such an overpowering environment, the reference of the project could be no other than landscape itself: sea, plastic, desert, mountains. A landscape that is the result not only of unique natural conditions, but of the extraordinary action of man.

Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

In opposition to the adjacent constructions, lande with a nostalgic iconography, the Health Center, though small in size, stands both as a landmark and a viewing point of the surrounding landscape. The means used are those of abstraction. The Health Center lies on the plot as an object without any compositional or iconographic references posed. This object is then subjected to a process of complexification through the use of color, randomness, reflection, and superposition, so as to make the building space- and placesensitive.

Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

The standard, rigid functional scheme suggested by the Health authorities, (entrance-hall-waiting rooms-consulting rooms) is inverted (entrance-consulting rooms-hall-waiting rooms) so that public areas can be defined with a higher degree of freedom. In this way, the waiting areas face the landscape and the views can be devolved to the patients. The blurring of the distinction between circulation and standing spaces allows for the creation of a fluid space with its own rules. The autonomy of the layout is enhanced by the freedom in the disposition of windows and openings and the internal views created across the entrance patio and the hall that separates the adult and children areas. Transparencies, reflections, oblique views, and exterior perspectives shape a conceptual space that in spite of its simplicity, fluctuates between clarity and indetermination, contemplation and introversion.

Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

Location: c/ Los Castaños, s/n, Urbanización La Envía Golf, Vícar, Almería, España
Project: septiembre 2005
Completion: diciembre 2006

Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

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Architects: Miguel Barahona, Luis Castillo
Responsible contractor: Luis Castillo
Technical arquitect: Luis Hervás
Structure: satec ingenieros s.l.
Engineer: estingal
Developers: ayuntamiento de Vícar, consejería de salud, junta de Andalucía.
Contractor: jarquil andalucia s.a.

Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

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Functional programme: Health center, 295 m2
1 consulting room for adults.
1 pediatric consulting room
1 lab, waitings rooms, toilets, possible extension
almacén municipal, local warehouse 243 m2

Consultorio en La Envía by Miguel Barahona

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See also:

.

Medical Centre in Milagro
by Doblee Architects
Maggie’s Centre by
Rogers Stirk Harbour
Health Centre by
Estudio Entresitio

Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown by Charles Correa Associates

Champalimaud Foundation by Charles Correa

This medical research centre in Lisbon by Indian architects Charles Correa Associates has a curved stone form with circular cut-aways.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

The Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown comprises two buildings, the first containing research laboratories and treatment rooms, and the second housing an auditorium and exhibition area.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

A central pathway crosses the site between the buildings, leading towards two monolithic stone sculptures and an outdoor amphitheatre.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

Above the pathway, a glass tubular bridge connects the two buildings together.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

Photography is by José Campos.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

More projects in Portugal on Dezeen »

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

More stories about medical buildings on Dezeen »

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

Here are some more details from Charles Correa:


The Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown

What makes me most proud about this project is that it is NOT a Museum of Modern Art.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

On the contrary, it uses the highest levels of contemporary science and medicine to help people grappling with real problems; cancer, brain damage, going blind.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

And to house these cutting-edge activities, we tried to create a piece of architecture. Architecture as Sculpture. Architecture as Beauty. Beauty as therapy.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

And we have also attempted to use NATURE as therapy. The WATER around us. The SKY above. The healing presence of RAIN FORESTS. All these are therapies for the patients.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

Of course we have a very special site. One of astonishing Beauty – and great historic Memory.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

Norbert Schulz has written eloquently about what he calls the GENUS LOCI, the essential meaning of a site – and Architecture’s unique responsibility to express, to release, that meaning, A musician can play the same Chopin concert one evening in Tokyo and the next in Brazil and the third in Paris – with every note exactly the same.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

But not the Architect. For a building is rooted in the soil on which it stands, In the climate, in the technology, in the culture – and the aspirations! – of the society that uses it. This is why the same building cannot be repeated anywhere and everywhere in the world.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

And of course what makes this site very special is that it is the place from which 500 years ago Vasco da Gama and the other great navigators went forth on their voyages of Discovery – a perfect metaphor for the discoveries of contemporary science today.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

This is why more than 50% of the site has been given back to the city of Lisbon for its citizens to celebrate that history – without in anyway compromising the privacy of the medical activities, and vice versa. The site plan is a yang-yang pattern of interlocking spaces.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

Lastly, I am proud that this project tries to express the essential nature, the Genus Loci, of this site without resorting to erratz versions of traditional architecture.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

No, we have used throughout a Contemporary voice to express not only the truth about this site – but also to celebrate a very crucial moment (arguably the DEFINING moment) in the history of this nation.

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

Project: Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown
Location: Portugal, Lisbon
Client: The Champalimaud Foundation
Purpose: Translational Centre for Brain, Eye-sight and Cancer research

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

Design Architect: Charles Correa Associates
Design Team: Charles Correa, Sachin Agshikar, Manas Vanwari, Dhaval Malesha
Laboratory and Clinical design: RMJM
Architect of Record: Glintt

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

Services: Vanderwell
Structure: LNM
Bridge design: Joerg Schlaich
Lighting: DPA
Landscape: PROAP
Signage: Studio Dambar

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

Area: 50,000 sq. mt.
Budget: 100 million Euros

Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

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Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

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Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

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Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

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Champalimaud-Foundation-by-Charles-Correa

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See also:

.

Maggie’s Centre Cheltenham
by MJP Architects
Maggie’s Centre Gartnavel
by OMA
GKK Dental Ambulatory
by Xarchitecten

Maggie’s Centre Gartnavel by OMA

OMA Maggie's Centre Gartnavel

Work starts today on Maggie’s Centre Gartnavel, a cancer-care facility in Glasgow, Scotland, designed by Office for Metropolitan Architecture.

OMA Maggie's Centre Gartnavel

The single-story building consists of a ring of interlocking spaces.

OMA Maggie's Centre Gartnavel

The facility is the latest in an ongoing series of Maggie’s Centres designed by leading architects. See our earlier story about the centre designed by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners.

OMA Maggie's Centre Gartnavel

See all our stories about OMA in our special category.

Maggie's Centre Gartnavel

Here’s some more info from OMA:


Construction begins on Maggie’s Centre Gartnavel designed by OMA

Rotterdam, 9 November 2010 – Ground will be broken today for Maggie’s Centre Gartnavel, a facility in Glasgow providing emotional and practical support for people living with cancer, their families and friends. Designed by OMA, the building, which is located on the grounds of Gartnavel hospital and close to the Beatson West of Scotland Cancer Centre, is one of several Maggie’s Centres in the UK and part of a pioneering project using thoughtful architecture and innovative spaces as tools for solace and healing.

OMA’s single-level, 534m2 building is a ring of interlocking, carefully composed spaces that provide moments of comfort and relief. With a flat roof and floor levels that respond to the natural topography, the rooms vary in height, with the more intimate areas programmed for personal uses such as counseling, and more open and spacious zones providing areas to gather and creating a sense of community.

Located in a natural setting, like a pavilion in the woods, the building is both introverted and extroverted: each space has a relationship either to the internal, landscaped courtyard or to the surrounding woodland and greenery, while certain moments provide views of Glasgow beyond.

The project, led by partners-in-charge Rem Koolhaas and Ellen van Loon, and associate-in-charge Richard Hollington, will be completed in summer 2011. The Maggie’s Cancer Caring Centres foundation, founded by Maggie Keswick Jencks and Charles Jencks, opened the first Maggie’s Centre in Edinburgh in 1996, and has since commissioned a series of innovative buildings designed by world class architects. The foundation approached OMA to design the Glasgow site in 2007.

On OMA
OMA is a leading international partnership practicing architecture, urbanism, and cultural analysis. The office is led by five partners – Rem Koolhaas, Ellen van Loon, Reinier de Graaf, Shohei Shigematsu and Managing Partner, Victor van der Chijs – and employs a staff of around 220 of more than 35 nationalities. To accommodate a range of projects worldwide, OMA maintains offices in Rotterdam, New York, Beijing, and Hong Kong.

Current projects under construction include the new headquarters for Rothschild bank in London, a major extension to the College of Architecture, Art and Planning at Cornell University, the headquarters for China Central Television in Beijing, and the Shenzhen Stock Exchange in southern China


See also:

.

Office in the Woods by SelgascanoSee all our stories
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