ºÝºÝߣshows by User: BTFOH / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif ºÝºÝߣshows by User: BTFOH / Wed, 22 Jun 2016 09:59:54 GMT ºÝºÝߣShare feed for ºÝºÝߣshows by User: BTFOH Edzard Schultz - The Architecture of Hospitals: High-end Medical Institutions /slideshow/edzard-schultz-the-architecture-of-hospitals-highend-medical-institutions/63329135 160602block2schultz-160622095954
Large-scale hospital complexes, especially teaching hospitals, tend to develop like small cities: buildings are added, under-sized facilities are extended, obsolete constructions may be demolished. Whereas cities usually develop on land with a fixed infrastructural framework, a parceling structure often that originates in ownership titles of the land, large-scale hospitals are ideally based on master plans that, however, tend to lack the long-term validity inherent in urban planning. Moreover, the distinction between public and private components is inexistent and, therefore, the clear planning framework derived from it is also lacking. Consequently, the dynamics of separate components (departments) and the performance of public elements (streets, squares) cannot be balanced. Without a fixed framework and generally acknowledged rules, and the lack of the capacity to pursue long term visions, this leads to a complete lack of consistency. To add insult to injury, departments often need to expand and are likely to do so by just adding volumes seemingly at random in the open spaces surrounding them. Often, the result is similar to what would happen in cities if people would construct buildings in the middle of streets and squares. The rule rather than the exception, this calls for strategies to minimize the damage. In this session we take a look at the Centre for Surgical Medicine II (ZOM II) in Düsseldorf (Germany) by Heinle Wischer Partner and the University Medical Center Groningen (Netherlands) by Kruisheer Hallink, Team 4, Wytze Patijn and Vera Yanovshtchinsky.]]>

Large-scale hospital complexes, especially teaching hospitals, tend to develop like small cities: buildings are added, under-sized facilities are extended, obsolete constructions may be demolished. Whereas cities usually develop on land with a fixed infrastructural framework, a parceling structure often that originates in ownership titles of the land, large-scale hospitals are ideally based on master plans that, however, tend to lack the long-term validity inherent in urban planning. Moreover, the distinction between public and private components is inexistent and, therefore, the clear planning framework derived from it is also lacking. Consequently, the dynamics of separate components (departments) and the performance of public elements (streets, squares) cannot be balanced. Without a fixed framework and generally acknowledged rules, and the lack of the capacity to pursue long term visions, this leads to a complete lack of consistency. To add insult to injury, departments often need to expand and are likely to do so by just adding volumes seemingly at random in the open spaces surrounding them. Often, the result is similar to what would happen in cities if people would construct buildings in the middle of streets and squares. The rule rather than the exception, this calls for strategies to minimize the damage. In this session we take a look at the Centre for Surgical Medicine II (ZOM II) in Düsseldorf (Germany) by Heinle Wischer Partner and the University Medical Center Groningen (Netherlands) by Kruisheer Hallink, Team 4, Wytze Patijn and Vera Yanovshtchinsky.]]>
Wed, 22 Jun 2016 09:59:54 GMT /slideshow/edzard-schultz-the-architecture-of-hospitals-highend-medical-institutions/63329135 BTFOH@slideshare.net(BTFOH) Edzard Schultz - The Architecture of Hospitals: High-end Medical Institutions BTFOH Large-scale hospital complexes, especially teaching hospitals, tend to develop like small cities: buildings are added, under-sized facilities are extended, obsolete constructions may be demolished. Whereas cities usually develop on land with a fixed infrastructural framework, a parceling structure often that originates in ownership titles of the land, large-scale hospitals are ideally based on master plans that, however, tend to lack the long-term validity inherent in urban planning. Moreover, the distinction between public and private components is inexistent and, therefore, the clear planning framework derived from it is also lacking. Consequently, the dynamics of separate components (departments) and the performance of public elements (streets, squares) cannot be balanced. Without a fixed framework and generally acknowledged rules, and the lack of the capacity to pursue long term visions, this leads to a complete lack of consistency. To add insult to injury, departments often need to expand and are likely to do so by just adding volumes seemingly at random in the open spaces surrounding them. Often, the result is similar to what would happen in cities if people would construct buildings in the middle of streets and squares. The rule rather than the exception, this calls for strategies to minimize the damage. In this session we take a look at the Centre for Surgical Medicine II (ZOM II) in Düsseldorf (Germany) by Heinle Wischer Partner and the University Medical Center Groningen (Netherlands) by Kruisheer Hallink, Team 4, Wytze Patijn and Vera Yanovshtchinsky. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/160602block2schultz-160622095954-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Large-scale hospital complexes, especially teaching hospitals, tend to develop like small cities: buildings are added, under-sized facilities are extended, obsolete constructions may be demolished. Whereas cities usually develop on land with a fixed infrastructural framework, a parceling structure often that originates in ownership titles of the land, large-scale hospitals are ideally based on master plans that, however, tend to lack the long-term validity inherent in urban planning. Moreover, the distinction between public and private components is inexistent and, therefore, the clear planning framework derived from it is also lacking. Consequently, the dynamics of separate components (departments) and the performance of public elements (streets, squares) cannot be balanced. Without a fixed framework and generally acknowledged rules, and the lack of the capacity to pursue long term visions, this leads to a complete lack of consistency. To add insult to injury, departments often need to expand and are likely to do so by just adding volumes seemingly at random in the open spaces surrounding them. Often, the result is similar to what would happen in cities if people would construct buildings in the middle of streets and squares. The rule rather than the exception, this calls for strategies to minimize the damage. In this session we take a look at the Centre for Surgical Medicine II (ZOM II) in Düsseldorf (Germany) by Heinle Wischer Partner and the University Medical Center Groningen (Netherlands) by Kruisheer Hallink, Team 4, Wytze Patijn and Vera Yanovshtchinsky.
Edzard Schultz - The Architecture of Hospitals: High-end Medical Institutions from Building the Future of Health
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Wolfgang Sunder Structural Hygiene: Making Hospitals Safe /slideshow/wolfgang-sunder-structural-hygiene-making-hospitals-safe/63329047 160530iikespeechsundergroningen-160622095742
The Safe and Antibiotic Resistent Hospital]]>

The Safe and Antibiotic Resistent Hospital]]>
Wed, 22 Jun 2016 09:57:42 GMT /slideshow/wolfgang-sunder-structural-hygiene-making-hospitals-safe/63329047 BTFOH@slideshare.net(BTFOH) Wolfgang Sunder Structural Hygiene: Making Hospitals Safe BTFOH The Safe and Antibiotic Resistent Hospital <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/160530iikespeechsundergroningen-160622095742-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The Safe and Antibiotic Resistent Hospital
Wolfgang Sunder Structural Hygiene: Making Hospitals Safe from Building the Future of Health
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Transitie in de gezonde stad Utrecht /slideshow/transitie-in-de-gezonde-stad-utrecht/63328885 216presentatieiabr2juni2016-160622095310
In Utrecht staat de ‘gezonde stad’ al decennialang hoog op de politieke agenda. Ondanks dat de gemiddelde gezondheid van de Utrechtse burgers relatief goed is, kampt de stad met grote gezondheidsverschillen tussen de wijken en is er sprake van sociale ongelijkheid en segregatie. De veranderingen in de zorgsector en de toegenomen aandacht voor gezonde verstedelijking bieden kansen aan zowel grootschalige instellingen en marktpartijen alsook aan (kleinschalige) burgerinitiatieven om te investeren in de gezonde stad. Het IABR Projectatelier Utrecht onderzoekt hoe deze kansen benut kunnen worden, hoe actoren via nieuwe vormen van gebiedsontwikkeling gezamenlijk kunnen bijdragen aan de gezonde stad en welke rol de overheid kan spelen. Hieruit worden ontwikkelprincipes voor gezonde verstedelijking afgeleid die ook voor andere steden en regio’s relevant zijn. Ateliermeester Joachim Declerck (Architecture Workroom Brussels) zal samen met de Paul Vermeulen (DeSmetVermeulen architecten) en Wouter Veldhuis (MUST stedenbouw) de belangrijkste resultaten van Projectatelier Utrecht presenteren.]]>

In Utrecht staat de ‘gezonde stad’ al decennialang hoog op de politieke agenda. Ondanks dat de gemiddelde gezondheid van de Utrechtse burgers relatief goed is, kampt de stad met grote gezondheidsverschillen tussen de wijken en is er sprake van sociale ongelijkheid en segregatie. De veranderingen in de zorgsector en de toegenomen aandacht voor gezonde verstedelijking bieden kansen aan zowel grootschalige instellingen en marktpartijen alsook aan (kleinschalige) burgerinitiatieven om te investeren in de gezonde stad. Het IABR Projectatelier Utrecht onderzoekt hoe deze kansen benut kunnen worden, hoe actoren via nieuwe vormen van gebiedsontwikkeling gezamenlijk kunnen bijdragen aan de gezonde stad en welke rol de overheid kan spelen. Hieruit worden ontwikkelprincipes voor gezonde verstedelijking afgeleid die ook voor andere steden en regio’s relevant zijn. Ateliermeester Joachim Declerck (Architecture Workroom Brussels) zal samen met de Paul Vermeulen (DeSmetVermeulen architecten) en Wouter Veldhuis (MUST stedenbouw) de belangrijkste resultaten van Projectatelier Utrecht presenteren.]]>
Wed, 22 Jun 2016 09:53:10 GMT /slideshow/transitie-in-de-gezonde-stad-utrecht/63328885 BTFOH@slideshare.net(BTFOH) Transitie in de gezonde stad Utrecht BTFOH In Utrecht staat de ‘gezonde stad’ al decennialang hoog op de politieke agenda. Ondanks dat de gemiddelde gezondheid van de Utrechtse burgers relatief goed is, kampt de stad met grote gezondheidsverschillen tussen de wijken en is er sprake van sociale ongelijkheid en segregatie. De veranderingen in de zorgsector en de toegenomen aandacht voor gezonde verstedelijking bieden kansen aan zowel grootschalige instellingen en marktpartijen alsook aan (kleinschalige) burgerinitiatieven om te investeren in de gezonde stad. Het IABR Projectatelier Utrecht onderzoekt hoe deze kansen benut kunnen worden, hoe actoren via nieuwe vormen van gebiedsontwikkeling gezamenlijk kunnen bijdragen aan de gezonde stad en welke rol de overheid kan spelen. Hieruit worden ontwikkelprincipes voor gezonde verstedelijking afgeleid die ook voor andere steden en regio’s relevant zijn. Ateliermeester Joachim Declerck (Architecture Workroom Brussels) zal samen met de Paul Vermeulen (DeSmetVermeulen architecten) en Wouter Veldhuis (MUST stedenbouw) de belangrijkste resultaten van Projectatelier Utrecht presenteren. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/216presentatieiabr2juni2016-160622095310-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> In Utrecht staat de ‘gezonde stad’ al decennialang hoog op de politieke agenda. Ondanks dat de gemiddelde gezondheid van de Utrechtse burgers relatief goed is, kampt de stad met grote gezondheidsverschillen tussen de wijken en is er sprake van sociale ongelijkheid en segregatie. De veranderingen in de zorgsector en de toegenomen aandacht voor gezonde verstedelijking bieden kansen aan zowel grootschalige instellingen en marktpartijen alsook aan (kleinschalige) burgerinitiatieven om te investeren in de gezonde stad. Het IABR Projectatelier Utrecht onderzoekt hoe deze kansen benut kunnen worden, hoe actoren via nieuwe vormen van gebiedsontwikkeling gezamenlijk kunnen bijdragen aan de gezonde stad en welke rol de overheid kan spelen. Hieruit worden ontwikkelprincipes voor gezonde verstedelijking afgeleid die ook voor andere steden en regio’s relevant zijn. Ateliermeester Joachim Declerck (Architecture Workroom Brussels) zal samen met de Paul Vermeulen (DeSmetVermeulen architecten) en Wouter Veldhuis (MUST stedenbouw) de belangrijkste resultaten van Projectatelier Utrecht presenteren.
Transitie in de gezonde stad Utrecht from Building the Future of Health
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-BTFOH-48x48.jpg?cb=1524054763 Can the built environment help us stay healthy for longer? Can it inspire us to exercise more? How can we provide for clean water and air? What will our future hospitals look like? Does linking healthy lifestyle and good nutrition to well-designed cities offer a possible cure for Western diseases like obesity and diabetes? And moreover: how can architects and urban planners play a vital role in solving these issues? These questions – and many more – are the mani focus of the Building the Future of Health platform and the large international conferrence under the same name that took place in June 2016 in the City of Groningen, The Netherlands. www.btfoh.eu https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/160602block2schultz-160622095954-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/edzard-schultz-the-architecture-of-hospitals-highend-medical-institutions/63329135 Edzard Schultz - The A... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/160530iikespeechsundergroningen-160622095742-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/wolfgang-sunder-structural-hygiene-making-hospitals-safe/63329047 Wolfgang Sunder Struct... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/216presentatieiabr2juni2016-160622095310-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/transitie-in-de-gezonde-stad-utrecht/63328885 Transitie in de gezond...