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A SHOWROOM FOR THE WELLNESS SUITES, ENVISIONED AS SHORTTERM STAYS FOR PATIENTS AND HEALTHCARE TRAVELERS WHO MAY NEED FURTHER CONSULTATIONS OR PROCEDURES, AS WELL AS THEIR LOVED ONES

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Back to basics

Back to basics

Such manoeuvres are necessary as the project guns for Green Building Index (GBI) certification, a balancing act between the developer’s eco-aspirations and patients’ need for a controlled, comfortable environment.

“In Malaysia particularly, a hospital that is GBI-certified is quite rare,” says Tiew. “It’s quite a big thumbs up for ourselves, a feather in our cap.”

The manoeuvres are also congruent with the scientific thinking at home with the project’s medically trained leaders. Access to natural environments, let alone views to them, are linked to good recovery outcomes, research says. Windows at the township possess a greater vertical tilt than usual, inspired by studies on the benefits of being able to see the ground from certain heights. The developer also eschewed enclosed corridors and winding spaces for navigable layouts that allow people to orientate themselves in the building.

“Hospitals are typically designed almost like rabbit warrens,” says Ling. “You come into the front door, and then you feel you’re going to get lost. The further you go in, the more stress you get because you worry you can’t get back to where you need to go. So, we’ve designed it from day one with the patient, the visitor at the centre.”

To the developer, it was imperative for architects to use building information modelling (BIM), preventing massive substantial variations and unnecessary wastage. The models keep the healthcare park and hospital on track for a 2025 completion.

“Right from the early stage, before the first pile cap was done, we were able to clearly see the whole design of each room and each floor itself,” says Tiew. “That’s seeing it like a doctor trying to do surgery.”

By early 2022, KLWC initiated piling and earthworks. The topography of the site gently inclines from one end to the other across approximately 15 metres. Its width covers several hundred metres, enabling the architects to place parking amenities either beneath ground level or a simulated ground floor.

The team strategically maximised the unique slope configuration according to height restrictions set by the Ministry of Health. The tallest of the healthcare park buildings rises only to 17 storeys, housing 512 wellness suites ideal for short-term stays by medical tourists and hospital inpatients who need monitoring after discharging.

CONFIGURED IN VARIOUS LAYOUTS, INCLUDING STUDIOS AND ONE-BEDROOM TYPES, THE WELLNESS SUITES ARE LIKENED TO SLEEK HOTEL ROOMS AND CONDOMINIUMS, BUT WITH BETTER, OPTIMISED DIMENSIONS FOR MAXIMUM ACCESSIBILITY TO PATIENTS AND HOSPITAL STAFF

In addition to 55 retail suites and 50,000 sq ft of business suites, the healthcare park houses 379 medical suites that doctors can privately own as clinics. Konzepte gave the suites, averaging around 650 sq ft in size, a modular design that expands to combine with adjoining units. Along with the hospital, the medical suites follow an open-plan layout, featuring columns at consistent, modular grids.

“We started with this idea of adaptability and flexibility, and that’s hand in hand with sustainability as well,” says Ling. “You don’t want to have to knock things down. Healthcare changes over time. The needs and requirements change.”

Several more healthcare centres and hospitals are expected to rise across the five as-yet-undeveloped parcels of the site. The future projects for seniors are particularly resonant since people aged 65 years and above now account for over 7% of the Malaysian populace.

But the needs of ageing people in Malaysia are not a monolith. In that light, the township has residential spaces tracking the full spectrum of retirement, old age, and decrepitude. These vary from senior living blocks for active agers to multi-generational condominiums for ageing-in- place households to an assisted living tower for those that require 24-hour care.

“You will no longer see an old folks’ home that combines people who are old and frail with people who are healthy,” says Tiew. “We are going way beyond, 10 steps ahead of that in Malaysia. We are moving forward.”

With a projected development value of MYR11 billion, the city is expected to evolve with the needs of its inhabitants over time. Health may be wealth, but the math also makes sense.

“Everything here is so scientifically designed,” says Ling. “It’s not my opinion. It’s all based on empirical data and research down to the position of the windows. We wanted sustainability to be real, to be felt, to be seen, and to have actual outcomes. We wanted people to continue to thrive within the city, within our buildings, as long as they’re there.”

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