worcester recovery center and hospital - architecture+worcester recovery center and hospital...

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architecture+ | 297 River Street, Troy, New York 12180 | 518-272-4481 | www.aplususa.com Our involvement with this project began as an engagement to develop over arching project goals and to describe the clinical and space program for the ensuing project. It was recognized from the beginning that the new Campus would replace two existing and aged hospital Campuses. We considered alternative locations on one or both of the existing campuses and various locations on each campus before developing a Master Plan that called for the development of the entire facility on the Worcester Campus. The programming process for this project began with the participation of more than 100 staff members of the Massachusetts Department Mental Health (DMH). Program approval required the consensus of over 300 stakeholders, psychiatric treatment professionals, and specialized planners and designers. A central programmatic goal was to create an architectural response which directly supports a therapeutic program in order to pro- mote emergence and recovery of patients in the hospital facility. This new facility treats long-term stay patients and includes adult, adolescent, and forensic beds. It melds the therapeutic and architectural programs such that the building becomes a recovery-focused clinical tool. Familiar elements analogous to the larger community (House, Neighborhood, and Downtown) are arranged to reflect the range of environments in which people typically conduct their lives. The private bedrooms, the most basic element, are clustered in Houses having active and quiet living rooms. These Houses provide the basic social unit of eight to ten residents within a twenty- six bed inpatient unit. Therapeutic treatment facilities (Neighborhoods) are arranged as the patients’ domain and shared by three inpatient units. Viewable from the Neigh- borhoods, the Downtown provides activity centers along interior streets and squares, surrounding the Village Green – a secure outdoor communal activity space. The Downtown centralizes the most social activities (café, arcade, store, music room and health club), surrounded by quieter activities (chapel, greenhouse, library, and art rooms). continued Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital Worcester, Massachusetts Awards Honor Award, AIA New England, 2013 Merit Award, Institutional, AIA, Eastern New York Chapter, 2013 WAN (World Architecture News) Healthcare Awards Shortlist, 2013 American Society of Interior Designers, Upstate New York/ Canada East Chapter, Commercial Project/Large, Design Award, 2013 Merit Award, AIA Eastern NY Chapter, 2006

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Page 1: Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital - architecture+Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital Worcester, Massachusetts Awards Honor Award, AIA New England, 2013 Merit Award, Institutional,

architecture+ | 297 River Street, Troy, New York 12180 | 518-272-4481 | www.aplususa.com

Our involvement with this project began as an engagement to develop over arching project goals and to describe the clinical and space program for the ensuing project. It was recognized from the beginning that the new Campus would replace two existing and aged hospital Campuses. We considered alternative locations on one or both of the existing campuses and various locations on each campus before developing a Master Plan that called for the development of the entire facility on the Worcester Campus.

The programming process for this project began with the participation of more than 100 staff members of the Massachusetts Department Mental Health (DMH). Program approval required the consensus of over 300 stakeholders, psychiatric treatment professionals, and specialized planners and designers. A central programmatic goal was to create an architectural response which directly supports a therapeutic program in order to pro-mote emergence and recovery of patients in the hospital facility.

This new facility treats long-term stay patients and includes adult, adolescent, and forensic beds. It melds the therapeutic and architectural programs such that the building becomes a recovery-focused clinical tool. Familiar elements analogous to the larger community (House, Neighborhood, and Downtown) are arranged to reflect the range of environments in which people typically conduct their lives. The private bedrooms, the most basic element, are clustered in Houses having active and quiet living rooms. These Houses provide the basic social unit of eight to ten residents within a twenty-six bed inpatient unit.

Therapeutic treatment facilities (Neighborhoods) are arranged as the patients’ domain and shared by three inpatient units. Viewable from the Neigh-borhoods, the Downtown provides activity centers along interior streets and squares, surrounding the Village Green – a secure outdoor communal activity space. The Downtown centralizes the most social activities (café, arcade, store, music room and health club), surrounded by quieter activities (chapel, greenhouse, library, and art rooms).

continued

Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital Worcester, Massachusetts

Awards

Honor Award, AIA New England, 2013

Merit Award, Institutional, AIA, Eastern New York Chapter, 2013

WAN (World Architecture News)Healthcare Awards Shortlist, 2013

American Society of Interior Designers, Upstate New York/Canada East Chapter, Commercial Project/Large, Design Award, 2013

Merit Award, AIA Eastern NY Chapter, 2006

Page 2: Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital - architecture+Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital Worcester, Massachusetts Awards Honor Award, AIA New England, 2013 Merit Award, Institutional,

architecture+ | 297 River Street, Troy, New York 12180 | 518-272-4481 | www.aplususa.com

Patient access to the Downtown is available to patients on a privilege basis. The downtown provides an active space containing resources that are shared by the entire Hospital. This provides patients with a sense of existing within a broader community while encouraging them to look out-ward to emergence from a clinical inpatient setting to life outside of the Hospital. The program as a whole encourages patients to take an active role in their treatment.

The Hospital’s quiet side is expressed as a residen-tial complex, while the Village Green façade is more municipal in its expression. Variation breaks down the facility’s scale and recalls the variety and commonalities of a New England village.

The building layout affords maximum view of the surrounding landscape and adjacent public park. Disturbed area surrounding the new facility will be planted with indigenous meadow grasses, shrubs, and trees. Rainwater is being harvested for irriga-tion of the heavily used secure courtyards.

Construction was completed in August of 2012. The building has received LEED Gold certification.

Architect: Ellenzweig; Collaborating Architect: architecture+

Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital continued