vincent callebaut’s biophilic hospital campus in belgium unfolds around flower-shaped atrium
CategoriesArchitecture

vincent callebaut’s biophilic hospital campus in belgium unfolds around flower-shaped atrium

Vincent Callebaut’s Hospital Campus in belgium

 

Vincent Callebaut has designed HOSPIWOOD, a biophilic hospital campus in Belgium with the aim of enhancing sustainability as well as patients’ experience and recovery. The project brings together local hospital networks on a 14-hectare campus designed to prioritize sustainability and offer high-quality healthcare. HOSPIWOOD serves as a link between the Buset and Longtain sites, situated along the Boulevard Urbain de l’Est, positioned to accommodate various functions within the cityscape, contributing to its overall vitality. At its core, HOSPIWOOD is committed to environmental responsibility and community well-being. The project’s masterplan promotes efficient resource management, incorporating features such as solar car parks, rainwater harvesting systems, and green spaces to mitigate environmental impact and enhance the local ecosystem.

vincent callebaut's biophilic hospital campus in belgium unfolds around flower-shaped atrium
all images by Vincent Callebaut 

 

 

a Modern and patient-friendly Hospital Infrastructure

 

The architects implemented a range of structures, such as The Building K, The Ponte Vecchio, The Vertical Forest, and The Medical Logipole, signaling a departure from traditional hospital design towards a more integrated and environmentally conscious approach. Building K connects to the core of the Tivoli Hospital’s Tripod, and its construction is now underway. The Ponte Vecchio acts as an inhabited bridge, linking various medical staff facilities like restaurants, meeting rooms, and administration offices, along with an amphitheater. Spanning Avenue Max Buset, it forms a direct link between the K building and the new Longtain hospital, featuring dynamic, spiral architecture symbolizing hospital partnership. The Vertical Forest embodies the new Longtain Hospital, featuring 600 rooms across 66,500 sqm within a mid-rise building. Its soft curves create a biophilic atmosphere promoting well-being and serenity. The circular base houses technical platforms around large patios, atriums, and gardens.

vincent callebaut's biophilic hospital campus in belgium unfolds around flower-shaped atrium
a biophilic hospital campus promoting sustainability and patient-centered care

 

 

On the ground floor, a flower-shaped atrium integrates the admissions hall and shops, while various medical services are distributed across the circular plane’s four petals. The first floor hosts intensive care, interventional platforms, and other specialized units, following a similar layout. The logistics basement, accessed via a peripheral circular moat, facilitates seamless flow management while minimizing visual and auditory disturbances. The Medical Logipole serves the logistical needs of the La Louvière site and other network locations. Situated on the northern roundabout side of Boulevard Urbain de l’Est, it offers direct road access and connects to the Longtain Hospital via a glass footbridge. The Campus consolidates complementary functions such as intergenerational housing, nursing homes, and recreational facilities within a masterplan promoting urban diversity and integration.

vincent callebaut's HOSPIWOOD is a biophilic hospital campus in belgium
promoting a nature-infused design

 

 

Green Infrastructure & Sustainable Solutions

 

HOSPIWOOD aims to develop a real eco-neighborhood where residents can enjoy living, working, and seeking medical care. The project focuses on efficient and balanced management of resources and flows, maximizing the site’s assets while preserving its environment. The project integrates elements of ecological and solidarity transition, such as urban greening, renewable energy use, and sustainable transportation. The masterplan adopts a radial and concentric layout, directing flows toward a central atrium, which serves as a public urban hub. The architecture blends harmoniously with the landscape, incorporating features like wind turbines and repurposed mining residues. Preserving the landscape involves combatting soil artificialization by transforming the Longtain site into a lush urban forest. This includes planting endemic trees, fostering native biodiversity, and implementing rainwater harvesting systems. A prominent feature is the tree-lined valley along the New Boulevard Urbain de l’Est, which serves as a rainwater filtration pond and provides a serene environment for residents. This holistic approach honors the industrial, cultural, and natural heritage of the region, enriching the identity of the community.

vincent callebaut's HOSPIWOOD is a biophilic hospital campus in belgium
an eco-neighborhood where residents can enjoy living, working, and seeking medical care

 

 

The solar car parks, equipped with photovoltaic canopies, are designated for staff, patients, visitors, and logistics. They are strategically located near the hospital in concentric bands, bordered by large hedgerows, with 50% of parking spaces covered with grass to promote soil drainage. Trees within the site are planted along these concentric hedges. Vertical landscaping is also prominent. Rooftop gardens, including a medicinal garden, adorn the eco-district, providing a shared space for caregivers and patients. These gardens are sheltered by solar canopies, generating electricity and hot water for patient rooms. Geothermal probes ensure year-round comfort, with additional solar canopies covering the logipole, totaling 7,350 m² of solar roofs for Longtain Hospital. Over 2.5 kilometers of planters line the care unit windows, offering hospitalized patients a soothing green environment. Rain chains connect these planters, guiding rainwater from the rooftop garden. The vertical forest hosts over 20,000 plants, capturing up to 120 tons of CO2 annually and aiding in bioclimatization, reducing temperatures by 3 to 5 degrees for patient comfort. This comprehensive approach reflects a commitment to citizen well-being and environmental stewardship.

vincent callebaut's biophilic hospital campus in belgium unfolds around flower-shaped atrium

Reference

vincent van duysen’s tile-clad residence in southampton draws from traditional farmhouses
CategoriesArchitecture

vincent van duysen’s tile-clad residence in southampton draws from traditional farmhouses

HBH Residence by Vincent Van Duysen

 

Belgian architectural firm Vincent Van Duysen has built a private residence on the lush coastline of Southampton in New York. Surrounded by wetlands and large oak trees, the architecture reflects the archetypal composition of a traditional farmhouse in the form of a cluster of volumes. Seeking a timeless material palette that emphasizes the careful composition of angled and vertical surfaces and highlights their shadows cast under the unique light, the architects chose traditional local materials such as typical wooden barn siding, cedar shingles, and bespoke fired clay tiles to cover the entire façade and roofs.

vincent van duysen's tile-clad residence in southampton draws from traditional farmhouses
the residence is clad in bespoke fired clay tiles | all images by Joseph D’Arco

 

 

reinterpreting traditional typologies against a unique backdrop

 

The site is enveloped by protected wetlands with a specific color and vegetation palette. Large oak trees dominate the access road to the property, creating a tranquil and natural environment. At the same time, the region is characterized by a very special light throughout the year, creating strong shadows and contrasts.

 

Against this unique natural background, the architecture by Vincent Van Duysen (find more here) is defined as a group of structures that house different functions of the program and consist of a main house and outbuildings. The design approach reflects the archetypal composition of a traditional farmhouse and residential structures that form an integral part of the cultural heritage of the region.

vincent van duysen's tile-clad residence in southampton draws from traditional farmhouses
the materiality of the project emphasizes the careful composition of angled and vertical surfaces

 

 

exterior and interior merge into one overall experience

 

From the lush driveway, occupants pass through one of the buildings to a central courtyard. The interaction of the different volumes around the central courtyard is unified by a wooden pergola and an extended wooden terrace on a higher level, which connects and encloses all the outdoor and public areas around the house. These terraces were conceived as a pure extension of all interior spaces. In the summer, the exterior and interior spaces merge into one overall experience, ensuring interactivity between the different parts of the program.

 

The public areas dominate the first floor in a careful sequence of spaces and atmospheres, always emphasizing an important axis or an interesting viewpoint of the landscape. Secondary functions are located in the outbuildings, while the higher floors house the more private and exclusive areas with the master bedroom and master suite, as well as the children’s rooms. All of these rooms feature higher ceilings that capture and frame nature through generous pocket windows set into the walls.

vincent van duysen's tile-clad residence in southampton draws from traditional farmhouses
the interaction of the different volumes around the central courtyard is unified by a wooden pergola

 

 

An important aspect of this project is the tectonic expression of the architectural volumes. It was crucial to create a timeless but contemporary material palette, but also to find a material that would highlight the careful composition of the volumes and the hierarchy between oblique and vertical planes, while emphasizing the tactility of the surfaces and the way they cast shadows under the unique light.

 

With an eye to the traditional materials of the region, such as the typical wooden barn siding or the cedar shingles, fired clay tiles were carefully selected for the entire façade and roofs to reflect the local architectural heritage in a contemporary way. This highly textured and tactile material, combined with naturally aged ipe wood and dark metal, completes a very powerful yet sober material palette that blends in with its surroundings.

 

vincent van duysen's tile-clad residence in southampton draws from traditional farmhouses
view of the interior of the HBH residence

vincent van duysen's tile-clad residence in southampton draws from traditional farmhouses
detail of the façade 

vincent van duysen's tile-clad residence in southampton draws from traditional farmhouses
detail of the wooden pergola

 

 

project info: 

 

name: HBH Residence
architects: Vincent Van Duysen
in collaboration with: STELLECO
interior design: Atelier Christian Liaigre
landscape design: Piet Oudolf
area: Southampton, NY, US

myrto katsikopoulou I designboom

jan 31, 2023



Reference