Dublin children’s hospital architects announced

Printer-friendly version Printer Friendly Version
Email Story Send This Story

January 2010
An Taoiseach Brian Cowen has announced the selection of Dublin-based Murray O’Laoire/Brian O’Connell Associates and the London studio of international firm NBBJ Architects to design the new Children’s Hospital of Ireland in Dublin and Ambulatory & Urgent Care Centre at Tallaght.

The three practices will collaborate on the design of these “landmark healthcare facilities” part of a new HSE initiative for “the cohesive delivery of healthcare for children in Ireland”. Minister for Health and Children, Mary Harney, said: “There is no more important building in the health arena than this project.” Offering “world-class healthcare”, education and research, The Children’s Hospital of Ireland (an impression of the proposed Therapy Park – a sky garden central to diagnostic/treatment and patient areas, is shown here) will amalgamate three existing children’s hospitals’ services, with the scheme comprising a 400-bed, 100,000 m2 main hospital in the centre of Dublin, and a 10,000 m2 ambulatory and urgent care centre in the south-west suburb of Tallaght. The architectural team will also design an adjacent maternity hospital, and an additional maternity hospital and ambulatory care/urgent care centre, at Tallaght to serve patients to the southwest of Dublin.

 


Printer-friendly version Printer Friendly Version
Email Story Send This Story
Supplier Search
Article Search

FEATURE ARTICLE

Planning for proton therapy
Bruce Johnson, senior vice-president at the Houston, Texas offices of internationally-recognised HKS Architects, examines the considerable physical challenge of accommodating sizeable proton external beam radiation therapy equipment into hospitals, drawing on work undertaken by the practice to date in designing hospitals to cater for such sizeable machinery.

PRODUCT ARTICLE

Infection ‘hot spot’ targeted
Birmingham City Hospital has turned to specialist in commercial showering, washroom controls, fittings, and systems Rada to help target improved efficiencies in infection control after detecting higher than expected C. difficile rates in a former Nightingale ward for the elderly.