Portfolio Winter 2013

Page 1

Kim b erly Bandy | M . A rc h+ H e a lt h

PORTFOLIO


1

RTC Re - de pl oyabl e Trau m a Cen ter m o d u les fo r m ass casu alty scen a r ios . [i nde pe nde nt pro ject:1]

2

POP-UP CLINIC A c l i ni c al wal l an d flo o r system d esig n ed to retro fit n u m ero u s building t y pologie s a nd out f i t unde r- se r ved co m m u n ities w ith b asic p rim ary care facilitie s . [t e a m proj e c t : 2]

3

MASTER PLANNING Imagi ni ng t he ho sp ital as a city via an alysis o f th e u rb an fab ric . [t e am proj e c t : 4]

4

V E T E R A N O U T PAT I E N T C E N T E R A 48- hour st uden t ch arrette h eld at Health Care Desig n Co n fere nc e 2013 t o de s ign a n ambul at ory surgical cen ter an d reh ab ilitatio n facility in Orlan d o, FL . [t e a m proj e c t : 5]

5

GRASSROOTS EXHIBIT An i nt e rac t i ve exh ib it p ro jectin g th e sto ry o f Clem so n Un iversity ’ s 100 y e a r s of Arc hi t e c t ure . [ t eam p ro ject: 7]

EXHIBIT DESIGN | PRODUCT DESIGN BUILDING DESIGN | MASTER PLANNING

PROJECTS


kim b erly.b andy 21@ gma il. c om 404 542 961 9 c

CLEMSON UNIVERSITY A+H

KIMBERLY BANDY


R E D E P LOY A B L E T R A U M A C E N T E R S | P R O D U C T D E S I G N

PNEUMEDIC RTC


PROF STEPHEN VERDERBER I N D I V I D U A L P R O J E C T: 1 PROGRAM: RHINO


Primary entry points Secondary entry points Primary road ways Site boundary

1

Site Features

1 Local General Hospital Services Surgery Center Burn Center Trauma Center 2 Government Property Tundikhel Ratna Park 3 Major roads 4 Ground Transportation hub 5 Potential expansion zones 6 Potential Pop-up Clinic Sites Durbar High School 7 Local Landmarks Sahid Gate

4

3

7

KATHMANDU, NEPAL POPULATION: 790,597 MOST COMMON NATURAL DISASTER: EARTHQUAKES

CONTEXT + CONCEPT

5


Linear Tr a u m a Process

Curved for efficient zoning

Tr i - P a r t System

Public Zone A Care / Consultation B Observation / Recovery

Care Te a m Zone

C Community / Resource

CONTEXT

CONCEPT

In mass trauma scenarios, efficiency and organization are key elements to providing effective care. The simplest method of transaction for patients is a linear one in which a victim is triaged, undergoes consu ltation and any necessary diagnostics, rec eives treatment, and is then taken to recovery or discharged.

Additionally, a mass trauma scenario means that families who may be separated or looking for injured loved ones must have a point of contact to assist them. With this in mind, Pneumedic inflatable RTCs allow for maximum flexibility and distinguish three typologies of functional use: (a) care, (b) observation, (c) community. By curving these

functions to work in-the-round, staff maintains efficiency while public gains maximum access to what they need. Any combination of the three unit typologies may be set up and arranged as needed in varying conditions.


VENTILATION:DOME

STRUCTURE:AIR

PROVIDING HIGH-FUNCTION, EFFICIENT AND ADAPTABLE STRUCTURES T H A T S I M U L T A N E O U S LY S U P P O R T H E A L I N G P R O C E S S E S

DESIGN FEATURES


FLEXIBILITY :PARTITIONS

WAYFINDING:TRANSPARENCY

SECTION DETAILS The flex-wall system may be arranged in any configuration to provide single consultation rooms or an open trauma ward. At the smaller entry dome, major public necessities such as bathrooms and triage stations may be set up to clear the middle from amassing traffic.


A URGENT CARE

UPON ARRIVAL TO THE PNEUMEDIC UNIT, PATIENTS MAY RECEIVE IMMEDIATE CARE IN OPERATING ROOMS OR FAST TRACK STATIONS. IDEALLY, THESE TRAUMA UNIT SPACES BEST WORK IN ONE PNEUMEDIC UNIT TOGETHER. TRIAGE, CONSULTATION, DIAGNOSTICS, LAB WORK, TREATMENT AND MEDICATIONS CAN BE COLOCATED WITHIN THE UNIT.

B OBSERVATION

PATIENTS REQUIRING LESS THAN 24 HOURS SUPERVISION AFTER PROCEDURES CAN STAY IN THIS UNIT. STAFF SUPPORT SPACE SHOULD BE COLOCATED SINCE BOTH REQUIRE CALM ENVIRONMENTS.

A B C

C COMMUNITY

AS DISASTER AFTERMATH SETTLES IN COMMUNITIES MAY USE THE PNEUMEDICS AS CONSULTATION AND COMMUNITY MEETING SPACE.

T H R E E S Y N C H R O N I Z E D T Y P O LO G I E S | 4 5 0 0 S F U N I T S

PROGRAM DESIGN


4,200 NSF

MAJOR PROGRAMS: FAST TRACK TREATMENT + SURGICAL CENTER ENVIRONMENTAL NEEDS: WAYFINDING + OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCY

FAST-TRACK URGENT CARE (6 STATIONS ) DIAGNOSTIC NICHE (XRAY, ULTRASOUND) RECOVERY/WAITING ZONE (4:8 BEDS) OPERATING ROOMS (1:2 | 800:1200 NSF) NURSING STATION (1 | 170 NSF) LAB (1 | 320 NSF) MEDICINE STORAGE/DISPENSARY (1 | 120 NSF) TOILETS (3 |80 NSF) STORAGE (1 |65 NSF)

A

C

4,250 NSF

MAJOR PROGRAMS: PATIENT + STAFF RECOVERY ENVIRONMENTAL NEEDS: SECLUSION + STORAGE

PATIENT FLOW

SHORT STAY BEDS (11:12 BEDS) NURSING STATION (1 | 200 NSF) MEDICINE DISPENSARY (1 | 120 SF) STAFF SLEEPING (3:6 BEDS) BREAK ROOM (1 | 120 SF) LOCKER ROOM (1 | 80 SF) TOILETS (7 | 112 NSF) STORAGE (1 | 65 SF) MEDICAL|CLEAN STORAGE (1 | 200 SF)

TYPICAL URGENT CARE EMERGENCY CARE

B

B

USER TYPES URGENT CARE EMERGENCY CARE STAFF COMMUNITY COUNCIL

3,500 NSF

CIVILIANS/FAMILIES

MAJOR PROGRAM: EDUCATION + ADMINISTRATIVE ENVIRONMENTAL NEEDS: OPEN AREAS + WORK STATIONS

MULTIPURPOSE CLASSROOM (1 | 480 SF) PRIVATE CONSULTATION ROOMS (3:6 | 144:216 NSF) BREAK ROOM (1 | 50 SF) TOILETS (4 | 65 NSF) STORAGE (1 | 65 SF) ADMINISTRATIVE WORKSPACE (1 | 200 SF) MEDICINE DISPENSARY (1 | 120 SF)

IDEAL ASSEMBLY

C

A


TRANSLUSCENT PVC MEMBRANE

ASSISTS IN WAYFINDING FOR POINTS ENTRY|EXIT PATIENT-CENTERED CARE BY ACCESSING DAYLIGHT

WHITE PVC PNEUMATIC TUBES

ASSISTS IN ASSEMBLY TIME+STORAGE BY QUICKLY INFLATING

LIGHTWEIGHT REUSABLE STRUCTURE

PRODUCT DESIGN

O n c e t h e u n i t i s i n f a ted an d s et u pon t h e fl oor s l at s , t ar p fl aps a n d c a b l e s t i e t h e u ni t t o t h e grou n d an d fl oor s ys t em.


TARP+PYLON WALL SYSTEM

ASSISTS IN FLEXIBLE PROGRAM 8’ TARP WALLS DESIGNATE PHYSICIAN ZONES 6’ TARPS WALLS DESIGNATE PATIENT ZONES

PARTS + PIECES SEWN SEAM DOUBLE OVERLAPPING SEAM OR2

DOUBLE MATERIAL DURABLE TWO-PLY PVC GENERATORS 1 per UNIT | 17k WATT GAS AIR COMPRESSORS 2:UNIT | 80GAL 7.5HP

STABILITY HYDRAULIC FOOTERS


A I R T R A N S P O RT | I N F L A T I B L E S T R U C T U R E | P Y LO N + S H E A T H P A RT I T I O N

DEPLOYMENT + ASSEMBLY


D E P LOY M E N T

A S S E M B LY

Military grade air vehicles may be used to transpor t the Pneumedic crates to an appropriate assembly site. The crates will have flooring, structure and wall sytems inside. Teams of 10-20 people per unit could then assemble it in less than 2 hours.

Once the floor structure is assembled, the structural pvc tarp is rolled out and inflated using air generators. Once the unit inflates to max capacity, wall system par ts and pieces may be assembled in the most appropriate arrangement for whatever function the unit best serves.


E n t r y a n d t r a i g e s t a t ion s may be s et u p at t h e s mal l er dome of t h e Pn e u m e d i c u n i t su c h t h at ac c es s from t h e pu bl i c i s fi l t ered a n d s a f e t y i s c o n s e q u en t l y mai n t ai n ed.


T h e f l e x - w a l l s y s t e m may be ar r an ged i n an y c on fi gu r at i on t o p ro v i d e s i n g l e c o n s u l t at i on rooms or an open t r au ma ward. At t h e s m a l l e r e n t r y d o m e , major pu bl i c n ec es s i t i es s u c h as bat h rooms a n d t r i a g e s t a t i o n s may be s et u p t o c l ear t h e mi ddl e from amas sing traffic.


RETROFITTING CLINICAL CARE FOR UNDERSERVED NEIGHBORHOODS

POP-UP CLINICS


PROF STEPHEN VERDERBER DESIGN TEAM: 2 PROGRAM: ARCHICAD 2012


A POCHE OF EXISTING SPACE TO PROVIDE CARE ANYWHERE

IDEA + CONTEXT

Th e abo v e s ke tc h e xte n d s K a zuyo S e j i ma ’ s i d e a b e hi nd t he O k ur a ya ma A par tm e n ts i n Yo ko h am a . S ha p i ng ne g a t i ve a nd p os i t i ve s p a c e f rom a b l o c k p l o t. Im age g r i ds o f n e i gh b o r hood c ont e x t


CONTEXT

CONCEPT

An abandoned Handelman furniture store located in a region of New Orleans he avily flooded during Hurricane Katrina provides a perfect shell space for a new pop-up clinic. While the region recovers financially and physically from the aftermath of a hurricane, a pop-up clinic provides routine health care for locals at a time of great c oncern for health.

The clinic utilizes a wall and floor system designed to flex around structure and take advantage of negative space created between the walls to house extra mechanical and plumbing systems. These units employa rounded wall curvature that easily fits around existing building structures and also eliminates the institutional and flimsy affect of make-

shift facilities. Each of the units houses all mechanical, physical and structural features necessary to work for all room types be it bathroom, office space or exam and procedure rooms.


SEAMLESS RETRO-FITTING OF PRIMARY CARE

PROGRAM DESIGN

A re n d e r i n g di s p l ay i n g t he l i ne a r a t r i um w he re t he Ve t e r a n’ s Wa l l b e g i ns an d e xte n ds o u t i n to th e w a t e r f ront . Li v e o ak c an o py s tu d i e s a nd re nd e r s of c ommuni t y s p a c e a nd vi e w s t o Ve te r an’s Wal k e xh i bi t t he c ons t a nt c onne c t i on t o mi l i t a r y f a mi l y


3

2

4

6

3 5

1 1 Check in 2 Vitals

3 Waiting/sub-waiting 4 Exam room

CLEAR PROCESSES

DEFINING OPEN SPACE

In this store-front scenario, a natural inviting window- filled facade marks entry into the clinic. Once inside, the clinic initiates a new language of clinical space such that the visitors hardly realize its temporary nature.

C lean walls and simple textures allow patients to feel safe and calm. To ease the function-first mindset of staff, translucent glazing at corners makes it easier to determine if a space is in use. The open ceiling keeps the clinic from feeling too confined while optional clear ceilings make it easy to block sound transmission into and from exam rooms or offices. The

5 Pharmacy 6 Check-out/Scheduling

curvaceous nature of wall corners makes traversing the space less dangerous when the layout calls for tighter navigational spaces. Within exam rooms, or thogonal and curved walls can be integrated to maximize spatial efficiency or to increase the aesthetic quality of the space.


5

PUBLIC| gradual curves

PHYSICIANS | efficient curves

PH AR MA CY

10

N KI EC CH

10

P A T I E N T V I S I T C H R O N O LO G Y

1’ radius

10

3’ radius

GE IA TR

ADMINISTRATIVE| minimal curves

2’ radius

20

20

CH EC KO UT

N TIO TA UL NS CO

EXAM + TREATMENT

NURSE STATION + SUBWAITING

CURVE BY FUNCTION

FLEXIBLE, ADAPTABLE, RE-USABLE RETRO-FIT DESIGN

PRODUCT DESIGN

S tu di e s o f ty pi c al p ati e nt t hr u- p ut t i me s i n g e ne r a l p r a c t i t i one r s ’ am b u l ato r y c are c e n te r s a l l ow e d f or b e t t e r und e r s t a nd i ng of w he re t o ma k e s p ac e m o re e ffi c i e n t an d e ve n f l e x i b l e . T he s ub w a i t i ng a nd c ons ul t a t i on s p ac e s e e m e d to n e e d t he mos t a t t e nt i on i n t e r ms of re s p e c t i ng p a t i e nt s ’ ti m e . Cu r v atu re o p ti o n s al l o w b ot h s e ns ua l f e e l t o a p ot e nt i a l l y t i g ht s p a c e a nd al s o e n s u re m axi m u m fl e x i b i l i t y f or s a t i s f yi ng s p a t i a l a nd f unc t i ona l e ffi c i e n c y n e e d s .


HEADER: MECHANICAL

MIDDLE: ELECTRICAL

THREE-PART WALL SYSTEM

A w al l s y s te m de v e l o ped i n t hre e p a r t s a l l ow e d f or a hi g h- e f f i c i e nc y to p z o n e w h e re m e c h ani c a l a nd e l e c t r i c a l s ys t e ms w e re s t ore d ; a mi d z o n e w h e re fu n c ti o n al ca p a c i t y i s ma x i mi ze d a nd more e l e c t r i c a l a c c e s s i s d i s tr i b u te d to u s e r s ; a nd f i na l l y a f oot e r zone w he re p l umb i ng a nd s tr u c tu r al i n te g r i ty i s b ui l t i n.

F O O T I N G : P LU M B I N G


M A X I M I Z I N G P R I V A C Y, F U N C T I O N A N D E X P E R I E N C E

THE EXAM ROOM


EXAM ROOM DETAILS An above-head wall section houses mechanical hvac systems and ambient lighting. At the wall’s mid-section, task lighting and fold out shelves and tables allow for temporary storage and standard procedure tasks. Sink units and exam bed surfaces may be installed into this level as well. The lower section houses plumbing and structural system.

Glass ceilings may be inser ted to increase exam room privacy and reduce noise pollution.


B R I N G I N G C E N T E R S O F E X C E L L E N C E T O D O H A , Q ATA R

MASTER PLANNING


PROF DAVID ALLISON MASTER PLANNING TEAM: 4 DESIGN TEAM: 2 PROGRAM: RHINO MASTER PLAN TEAM: Ya o l o n g W a n g Erwin Riefkohl Braden Reid Kimberly Bandy DESIGN TEAM: Braden Reid Kimberly Bandy


FIGURE-GROUND

STREETS

IMAGE OF THE CITY

CONTEXT: URBAN ANALYSIS

U N D E V E LO P E D LAND


VEGETATION

MEDICAL

DOHA TODAY

DOHA TOMORROW

A city that continues to grow higher and wider in order to provide both the local citizens and the rising tourist population with amenities that transcend their traditional ideals of excitement and excellence. With the recently booming oil industry at their benefit, the city of Doha continues to acquire and develop great urban features such as the Pearl and the Diplomatic District - replete with signature architectural and infrastructural wonders.

In 2022, Doha Qatar will host the FIFA World Cup tournament, further propagating recent ambitious development of the city. In addition to the new World Cup soccer stadium, the city has ventured to provide a state-of-the-art mass trauma and emergency facility with clinical centers of excellence and ambulatory care. This addition to the rather thin survey of urgent-care medical facilities within the city-limits will be sited within the Hamad Medical

RESIDENTIAL

Campus just north of the historic downtown and only two city blocks (or rings) West of the popular waterfront parks and civic attractions of the Corniche.


RING DISTRICTS

HAMAD MEDICAL CAMPUS RING C

STORY OF THE CITY

CONTEXT: URBAN ANALYSIS

PRIMARY ACCESS TO HAMAD MEDICAL CAMPUS


TRAVEL TIMES TO HAMAD MEDICAL CAMPUS

CORNICHE AS AN INTEGRATIVE EDGE

CIRCULATION What began as a small fishing village in the center of the Corniche waterfront expanded in a polar fashion around the first historic ports and became a dense urban fabric. As Doha continues to expand its infrastructure, so too does its coastline expand out into the Persian Gulf. Highways radiate out from a centroid marking the original fishing docks of the mid 18th century. Today these “rings” offset the coastline in a manner that divides the city into a

HISTORIC DISTRICT + NEW D E V E LO P M E N T

CONNECTIVITY sort of dart board of function and activity with the coastline being a high-density combination of these two facets.

Edges such as the Corniche have begun to draw more tourists and locals out toward the water and establish a habitable interface despite the region’s fierce climatic conditions. Public, civic and institutional functions mix with residential, commercial and business sectors of the city via the extensive coastline park known as the “Corniche” that extends from the northern Diplomatic District down to the historic downtown center.


HOSPITAL IN THE CITY + AS A CITY

DESIGN GUIDELINES


Hamad M edi c al C ampu s as i t exi s t s t oday. Thre e e x isting hospit al s al i gn t h e mi ddl e axi s of t h e c ampu s . The re ce ntly comple te d Hamad M edi c al C i t y joi n s t h e medi c al an d nurse housing ca mpus on t h e n or t h en d wi t h t h es e ol der h os pi t als.

ESTABLISH LEGIBLE CONTEXT INTERFACE

D E V E LO P A COHESIVE CIRCULATION SYSTEM

CONNECT + DIVERSIFY CAMPUS

CREATE A RICH PUBLIC REALM

SENSIBLE C U LT U R A L INTEGRATION


ISSUES & CONSTRAINTS OF HAMAD MEDICAL CAMPUS

CAMPUS ANALYSIS


ASSETS + OPPORTUNITIES


FUNCTIONAL METRIC Civic + Business

Medical

rk

AL

PAHa EIL

ET RE ST

AHME T D BIN ALI STREE

Private

S

Public

N WO TAE AL

AL RAY YAN RO AD

STREET LEEJ KHA AL

DENSITY METRIC

JLIS MA

RU M

Residential + Tr a n s i t

LEGIBLE CONTEXT INTERFACE + CONNECTING A DIVERSE CAMPUS

CAMPUS RE-ZONING

S i n c e t h e s o u t h e d g e of t h e c ampu s border s u r ban res i den t i al l an d u s e a n d t h e n o r t h e a s t e dge border s c i vi c an d di pl omat i c l an d u s es , a 4 x 2 m a t r i x a l l o t i n g g r a d a ti on s of den s i t y an d fu n c t i on ac ros s t h e s i t e propos es h o w f u t u re i n f r a s t r u c t u re c an be pl an n ed. A n e w i n t e r n a l c i rc u l at i on rou t e c an h el p di vi de an d u n i t e t h e s i t e a p p ro p r i a t e l y.


DENSITY BIFURCATION Although the entire campus serves and houses those who need and provide medical services respectively, a great deal of civic spaces, medical residencies and medical facilities may be required as the campus evolves. Utilization densities in zone A fulfill the needs of mass public interests while zone B exhibits quieter, and slower-paced points of interest for smaller groups and individuals; this includes future medical

FUNCTIONAL GRADATIONS residencies, office buildings and a new Inpatient Units.

As visitors of the site move from the Public zone east to the Park zone they pass from civic and public-oriented destinations to privately accessed destinations. As one travels farther from the transit hub, buildings function less as points of interest for entertainment and more as very specific and individualized medical centers. Sector 4, however, remains as open garden space and parking in order to buffer highway.


RU M Phase I main hospital construction infrastructure + streets

Phase III outpatient specialties civic space mixed use commercial

Phase I public yard service plant Phase V residential mised use

Phase IV outpatient specialties civic space mixed use commercial

Phase II (fit out shell space)

AL RAY YAN RO AD

JOINING DIVERSE EDGES

CAMPUS PHASING + CONNECTIVITY

STREET LEEJ KHA AL

AHME T D BIN ALI STREE

AL

AH EIL

R ST


RU M

ST

AL RAY YAN RO AD

STREET LEEJ KHA AL

AHME T D BIN ALI STREE

AL

AH EIL

PHASING INWARD

CLEAR CONNECTIONS

Project phasing of this south east sector of the campus may be inclined to design the campus’s interface with the two major highways before working backward into the depths of the campus. At its center, the campus expects to house a transit hub where the new underground metro will stop.

By locating major routes that respond to the campus zoning plan, medical visitors and even employees will best circulate through a central cross axis that services the entire site. Not only will each sector be legibly connected, the streets will better separate the functions such that heterogeneous traffic patterns do not intersect one another.


DIPLOMATIC DISTRICT

CORNICHE SHERATON PARK NATIONAL THEATER AL BIDDA PARK RUMEILAH PARK MIA PARK MUSEUM OF ISLAMIC ART

HISTORIC DOHA CONNECTED & PROTECTED CAMPUS

DESIGN DRIVERS: CORNICHE + DUNES


DUNES IN DOHA The protective forms of the dune may also serve as an attractive edge that encourages social interaction orother communal traditions. The Corniche in Doha already exhibits these physical and effective qualities of the dune.


EXTREME SUNLIGHT

CONNECTED & COHERENT CAMPUS

DESIGN STRATEGIES

CONNECTIVITY


EFFICIENCY

EXTREME SUNLIGHT

CONNECTIVITY

EFFICIENCY

A skin of arrayed hexagonal aperatures filters the harsh sunlight from high-occupancy spaces.

Acute and curvaceous dunes allow various sectors of the hospital to remain adjacent.

The protected inner core presents visitors and patients with quick access to all areas of the hospital.

Sharp geometries pierce the protective mass and provide natural light to Inpatient rooms and public waiting areas.

An introverted public zone reinforces social integration.

The long exterior coastline supports extensive care process under mass casualty scenarios.

Gentle forms offer opportunities to bridge constraining highways and engage favorable context.


OPERATIONAL

INFORMATIVE

The Emergency center, surgical suites and Intensive Care Units are all vertically aligned on the East edge of campus where immediate acces from the surrounding highways encourages fast and efficient through-put of patients seeking Emergency care.

The deeper core of the building houses more technical programs such as imaging and interventional procedures. These programs require the least amount of daylight to perform effectively.

AL KALEEJ ST. north-south connector

OPTIMIZING USER EXPERIENCE VIA DISTRICTS

PROGRAM ANALYSIS


DIAGNOSTIC Medical office buildings and ambulatory care centers engage the navigational center of the campus to make future connections to the transportation hub and quick access from the major campus circulation. Quick examinations and diagnostic imaging can be accessed quickly and easily from major campus drop off points.

ASSETS + OPPORTUNITIES EMERGENCY / TRAUMA IMAGING MOB

SURGERY ICU CLINICS + CENTERS OF EXCELLENCE

D+T/INTERV. IPU PARKING CSS / UTIL.


CONNECTED & PROTECTED CARE

STRUCTURE: SKIN APERATURES


APERATURE DIMENSIONS .3m .4m

2m

.5m

.7m

.9m

APERATURE ARRAY

2m

HONEYCOMBS The honeycomb skin aperatures regulate the interior access to direct sunlight while still allowing inhabitants to engage with outdoors. ICU and IPU rooms adjacent to exterior walls means that they maintain views while still maintaining sunshaded windows.


48-HR CHARRETTE | VETERANS ADMINISTRATION (VA)

VA AMBULATORY SURGICAL CENTER


PROF DAVID ALLISON DESIGN TEAM: 5


F A M I LY - C E N T E R E D C A R E F O R E V E R Y G E N E R A T I O N B Y A C T I V A T I N G T H E M I L I T A R Y F A M I LY A S A S E C O N D A R Y M E A N S O F H E A L I N G

CONTEXT + IDEA

Th e i n c l u s i o n o f fam i l y i n t he i mme d i a t e c a re p roc e s s a s w e l l a s t he he a li n g pro c e s s d r aw s u po n t he s up p or t s ys t e m of one ’ s mi l i t a r y f a mi l y. N e are s t VA h o s pi tal an d a mb ul a t or y c e nt e r s of c a re ; % of ve t e r a ns w ho l i v e i n F L; m ajo r i ty s e r v i c e d ut y of FL ve t e r a ns


U.S. VETERANS L I V I N G I N F LO R I D A

18% ORLANDO DOWNTOWN

VA MEDICAL CENTER

1

REGIONAL HOSPITAL

CALL FLORIDA HOME

FLORIDA

16 MILES

28 MINUTES

SITE 2 18 MILES

ORLANDO VET CENTER COUNSELING CTR

31 MINUTES

MAJORITY SERVICE FOR FL VETERANS

31%

24 MILES

31 MINUTES

LAKE NONA ANNEX 3 PRIMARY CARE

CONTEXT

CONCEPT

This ambulator y surgical center in Orlando, FL intends to serve all veteran populations in the metro area since it will be the only location for ambulatory procedures. In addition to appeasing the multitude of veteran generations it must also consider the VA’s PACT system of Patient-Aligned Care Teams.

C lemson University’s solution synthesizes the VA PACT model of care with the need to appropriately serve diverse veteran generations who will use the facility. By establishing the Veteran’s Wall, a destination within the building where families and patients alike come into a ‘canteen’ setting to share stories, suppor t one another and consequently

VIETNAM VETS

OF ALL FLORIDA VETS FOUGHT IN VIETNAM

receive the family model of suppor t that simulates that of their time on duty. This secondary family suppor t sytem encourages healing in multiple dimensions while respecting each Veteran’s unique experience. A peripheral canopy of life oaks and a calm waterfront view infuse veteran care with tranquility.


A LINEAR SEAM UNITING GENERATIONS AND FAMILIES

THE VETERAN’S WALL

A re n d e r i n g di s p l ay i n g t he l i ne a r a t r i um w he re t he Ve t e r a n’ s Wa l l b e g i ns an d e xte n ds o u t i n to th e w a t e r f ront . Li v e o ak c an o py s tu d i e s a nd re nd e r s of c ommuni t y s p a c e a nd vi e w s t o Ve te r an’s Wal k e xh i bi t t he c ons t a nt c onne c t i on t o mi l i t a r y f a mi l y


CANOPY

COMMUNITY

This ambulator y surgical center in Orlando, FL intends to serve all veteran populations in the metro area since it will be the only location for ambulatory procedures. In addition to appeasing the multitude of veteran generations it must also consider the VA’s PACT system of Patient-Aligned Care Teams.

C lemson University’s solution synthesizes the VA PACT model of care with the need to appropriately serve diverse veteran generations who will use the facility. By establishing the Veteran’s Wall, a destination within the building where families and patients alike come into a ‘canteen’ setting to share stories, suppor t one another and consequently

receive the family model of suppor t that simulates that of their time on duty. This secondary family suppor t system encourages healing in multiple dimensions while respecting each Veteran’s unique experience. A peripheral canopy of life oaks and a calm waterfront view infuse veteran care with tranquility.


P A T I E N T- C E N T R I C M E T H O D S T H A T I N C R E A S E Q U A L I T Y O F C A R E

PROGRAM + PROCESS

P ro g r am s tac ki n g pl ac e s a mb ul a t or y c ons ul t a t i on a nd e x a mi na t i on rooms o n fi r s t fl o o r w i th s u rgi c a l rooms a nd p a t i e nt rooms on s e c ond f l oor. B y fo l l o w i n g th e VA ’s P AC T c a re mod e l , p a t i e nt s move l e s s a nd t he re f ore h av e d e s i gn ate d re c o v e r y s p a c e w he re f a mi l y i s w e l c ome


OR C

PR P

OR

P

W

TRADITIONAL SURGICAL VISIT PROCESS

PACT MODEL

1

step

2

3

step

4

step

step

CONSULT EXAMINE DIAGNOSE

01 HOME

5

step

1

PATIENT ROOM

step

2

step

pre-op / post-op

surgery

3

step

4

step

5

step

PROCEDURE ROOM

02

CONSULT | EXAM | DIAGNOSIS 01

03

SURGICAL PROCEDURE 02 REHAB

P A T I E N T V I S I T T Y P O LO G I E S

pre-op / post-op

check-in

6

step

check-out

NEW PACT MODEL

check-out

phase 2 recovery

phase 1 recovery

surgery

pre-op

check-in

TRADITIONAL CARE MODEL

REHABILITATION 03


EXHIBIT DESIGN | INTERACTIVE INSTALLATION | CREATIVE INQUIRY

GRASSROOTS EXHIBIT


PROF DAN HARDING DESIGN TEAM: 7


AN INTERACTIVE LANDSCAPE THAT TELLS THE STORY OF CLEMSON’S SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE (CUSoA)

CONTEXT

Th e E xh i b i t al l o w e d al u m ni t o t e l l t he i r s t or y a nd t he n d i s p l a y i t s uc h t ha t th e i r i m m e d i ate an d o v e r a l l c ont e x t a d d e d ne w l a ye r s t o t he w hol e s t or y. Ce n te n n i al l o g o fo r Cl e ms on’ s S c hool of Arc hi t e c t ure


CONTEXT

CONCEPT

Clemson University School of Architecture’s Centennial celebration kicked off in Spr ing of 2013 and reached its culmination in early fall of 2013. In order to demonstrate the program’s history and engage alumni who attended these celebrator y events an exhibit was co mmissioned to pay tribute to the many individuals who define its history.

The design team focused primarily on the engagement of the alumni and saught first and foremost to encourage positive reflection on their par t in the program. From this, the idea to use storylines as a means for alumni to share and reflect back upon their experience became the basis of the exhibit. Once these experiences are placed within an alumni matrix,

a table featuring the names of more than 4,000 graduates of the program, a residual context forms telling the story of Clemson architecture. Assembling their stories, the alumni experience a very individual recollection of their time at Clemson, a nd once they place their story in the matrix, they contribute to the greater movement that is CUSoA.


LEE II-LEE III BRIDGE TOWER

SITE

2

2

2

2

2

2

131 132 133 134 135

LEE I 1

1

171

1

169

2

2

2

172

M

1

2

126

2

124

2

2

141 142 143 W

2

127 128

2

100

M

2

2

136 137 138 139 140

1

2

129

2

2

2

112E

112D

2

123

LEE II

2

122 2

1

121

101

2

120 2

119 1

101A 1

168

1

1

1

1

1

2

118

2

118B

2

2

118A

100A

1W

165 163 161 159 157 155 1

1

1

1

1

166 164 162 160 158

M 1W

152

1

151

1

150

2

113

2

111

LEE III


4’-0”

6’-0” 3’-0”

4’-0”

0

2

6

14

THE BRIDGE RE-PURPOSED

CONTINUITY

The connection between LEE II and LEE III historically housed classroom space for architecture students previous to LEE III’s construction and opening in 2012. Then it was referred to as the Tower. Today the tower is more formally known as the Bridge and now home to exhibit and presentation space for student and faculty work.

Exhibit space flanks both sides of an undefined connection of the LEE II and LEE III hallways. This transitional nature of the space encouraged the exhibit’s wish to be interactive as well as indicative of its role as a celebration of the school reaching its 100th year of architecture education.


a

WOODWORKING | STEEL WELDING

CONSTRUCTION

We l d i n g l a b a t C l e m s on Un i ver s i t y: t wo projec t member s wel d l eg ro o t s t o g e t h e r. ( a ) Wo o d f r a m e t a b l e , (b) wel ded s t eel l egs , ( c ) p l a c e m e n t o f l e g s on s i t e

b

c


1/4” foam core

3/4” insulation foam

1/2” primed MDF panels 3/4” plywood

1/2” hot rolled steel rod

T A B L E A S S E M B LY

A m a t r i x o f n a m e s w as pr i n t ed on 1 /4 ” foam c ore s o t h at t h e gr as s s t or y pi ec es m a y p u n c t u re t h e s u r fac e T h re e l a y e r s o f f o a m i n s u l at i on provi ded addi t i on al s t abi l i t y i n s u ppor t i n g a bed of story lines


WOODWORKING | STEEL WELDING

INSTALLATION

In s tr u c ti o n s di s p l ay e d o n s i t e e x p l a i ne d t he a s s e mb l y p ro c e s s .


GRASS 1 ROOTS AN HISTORICAL LANDSCAPE OF CLEMSON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE STUDENTS

ASSEMBLE YOUR STORY

BY WRAPPING THE DEGREES, CAMPUSES AND CERTIFICATES YOU COMPLETED AT CLEMSON AROUND YOUR STORY LINE

CERTIFICATES CERTIFICATES DIGITAL ECOLOGIES

2

FIND YOUR NICHE

UNDER THE YEAR OF YOUR MOST RECENT CLEMSON DEGREE

1970

COMMUNITY+DESIGNBUILD A+H A+H

STUDYABROAD ABROAD STUDY BARCELONA CHARLESTON GENOA

Jeffrey R. Abrams James F. Barker

DEGREES DEGREES

Wallace D. Beaman

M.S. M.ARCH

Emma J. Carson

B.ARCH

Steade R. Craigo

B.A. + B.S.

3

PLANT YOUR STORY

INTO THE CLEMSON BIO-SCAPE


CUPS

PAW PRINTS

PAW PRINTS

OTHER ICONS CUPS

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John Jacques ‘70 B.A.

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Mark Carroll ‘78 B.A., ‘81 M.Arch

James Barker ‘70 B.A.

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PAW PRINTS

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William Pelham ‘77 B.A., ‘81 M.Arch

PARTS OF THE WHOLE

STORIES

OTHER ICONS

Robert Silance ‘73 B.A., ‘81 M.Arch

David Allison ‘78 B.S., ‘82 M.Arch

DISTINGUISHED A LPAWUPRINTS MNI

Distinguished contributor to Clemson University School of Architecture


CUPS

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Dina Battisto ‘93 M.Arch

Donald Golightly ‘68 B.A.

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Clarissa Mendez on behalf of

Edward U. Rios, ‘75 B.A.

CUPS

Elizabeth Booker Night ‘61 B.A. Kimberly Stanley ‘82 M.Arch

Sallie Hambright ‘02 B.A.

CUPS

OTHER ICONS OTHER ICONS

CUPS

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DEGREES CUPS

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CERTIFICATES OTHER ICONS

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STUDY ABROAD

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B.A. B.S.

M.Arch

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M.S. Ph.D

Architecture + Health

Digital Ecologies

Architecture + Community Build

Barcelona, Spain

Genoa, Italy

Charleston, SC


k b andy@g. c l e mson. e du

THANK YOU

THANK YOU. kimberly.bandy21@gmail.com


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