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Good Design Is Good Business 2016Health Care Design

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare in Toronto

KPMB Architects, Diamond Schmitt Architects, HDR Architecture, and Stantec Architecture

By Alex Bozikovic
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

The new Bridgepoint Active Healthcare facility sits on manicured grounds adjacent to the historic Don Jail.

Photo © Nic Lehoux

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

The former jail has has been adapted as an administrative and educational center for the hospital.

Photo © Tom Arban

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

The building borders the city’s Riverdale Park and overlooks the Don Valley River System and Parkway, connecting staff and patients to nature and community.

Photo © Jeff Greenville

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

The hospital’s daylit therapy pool has broad views of the valley and park.

Photo © Tom Arban

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

A spacious rooftop garden provides an alfresco alternative for patient visits and impromptu staff meetings.

Photo © Tom Arban

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

Patient rooms feature generous glazing that allows occupants to see outside even while lying in bed.

Photo © Tom Arban

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

An exterior view of the new facilities and the former jail.

Photo © Nic Lehoux

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

The hospital's facades are primarily clad with dark-gray zinc panels and studded with tall bay windows, one for each patient room.

Photo © Nic Lehoux

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

The 680,000-square-foot campus, commissioned by the University of Toronto–affiliated health network Bridgepoint and the province of Ontario’s Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, breaks the mold by opening itself to the city and to nature.

Photo © Nic Lehoux

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

Combined with the spacious patient rooms, the public and communal spaces also invite engagement of family and friends, a key to Bridgepoint Active Health’s strategy to improve and accelerate healing outcomes.

Photo © Nic Lehoux

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

Combined with the spacious patient rooms, the public and communal spaces also invite engagement of family and friends, a key to Bridgepoint Active Health’s strategy to improve and accelerate healing outcomes.

Photo © Tom Arban

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

Section - spa stairs.

Courtesy the architects

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

10th floor plan.

Courtesy the architects

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare

Typical Patient Floor Plan.

Courtesy the architects

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
Bridgepoint Active Healthcare
June 1, 2016

Architects & Firms

Diamond Schmitt Architects
HDR Architecture
KPMB Architects
Stantec Architecture

 

People/Products

“No one likes going to the hospital,” says architect Bruce Kuwabara of KPMB Architects. That was the central insight that Kuwabara and a team of collaborating architects—including Toronto-based KPMB, Stantec, Diamond Schmitt, and HDR—used in designing a new hospital for the city’s Bridge­point Active Healthcare. This would be a new typology that would better serve patients’ happiness and well-being.

The 680,000-square-foot campus, commissioned by the University of Toronto–affiliated health network Bridgepoint and the province of Ontario’s Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, breaks the mold by opening itself to the city and to nature.

The site borders the 104-acre Riverdale Park just east of Toronto’s core; it is located on a hill with views west over the Don River valley and the downtown skyline. Bridgepoint, a rehabilitation and continuing-care institution, had occupied a 1960s building that was functionally obsolete. Hospital CEO Marian Walsh advocated for its new facility to be “a village of care,” with improved quality of life for patients and stronger links to the community. The project also includes an adaptive reuse of the 19th-century Don Jail, which sits to the east, for administrative and educational purposes.

Michael Moxam, practice leader at Stantec in Toronto, says that the hospital “typically deals with very long stays, up to six months.” In light of that, “the vision is creating a healthcare environment that goes way beyond the building.”

The hospital is a long rectangular block that runs north–south, parallel to the nearby valley. Its facades are primarily clad with dark-gray zinc panels and studded with tall bay windows, one for each patient room. A series of moves and details break down the massing: the largely glazed main floor, a horizontal bar at the central fifth level for mechanicals, and bands of local Algonquin limestone cladding.

KPMB and Stantec, working with a site plan from consultants Urban Strategies, translated the hospital’s ethos of openness into urbanism. “We spent a lot of time thinking about the lower levels being not a hospital, but a community building,” says Kuwabara. “The key was to integrate the building with the landscape, the streets, and community.”

The 404-bed, 10-story building, while massive, succeeds at that goal. Because car and ambulance traffic is relatively limited, access roads are modestly scaled; the hospital reaches out to the surrounding Riverdale neighborhood through a series of plazas and green spaces. A one-story “porch” pushes north from the main building. It contains a therapy pool with glazed walls overlooking the valley and park, and it is capped with a public open-air terrace that includes a labyrinth conducive to meditation. Above, a fifth-floor balcony and rooftop garden provide outdoor space for patients.

Inside the patient rooms, walls are 40 percent glazed, with horizontal windows that allow patients to see outside even while lying in bed. And each room includes a vertical bay window offering high and lateral views of the sky, valley, and city. “Through a tremendous degree of transparency and porosity, the natural world is always apparent,” says Diamond Schmitt principal Gregory Colucci, a design team member. “Patients are never in a place where they don’t have a reference to the outside world.”

The building evolved through a complex design-build procurement procedure. KPMB, Stantec, and preservation specialists ERA worked with the hospital, provincial government, and community groups to establish the project’s goals and a design. Then a consortium led by developers Plenary Group won the contract to design, build, finance, and maintain the facility for 20 years. Diamond Schmitt Architects and the Toronto office of HDR elaborated on the design, oversaw construction, and served as architects of record.

This unwieldy process—which Moxam describes as “an epic relay race”—produced a consensus among the four architecture firms involved in the main building. The Stantec and HDR teams, which have substantial health-care experience, focused on the design of patient care areas, while KPMB and Diamond Schmitt oversaw the site plan, massing, building envelope, and other aspects. KPMB’s Kuwabara credits Diamond Schmitt with “substantial alterations and improvements” to the original scheme.

This many-hands approach has translated into clinical and financial payoffs: since moving into the new building in 2013, Bridgepoint has seen its average stay for rehab patients drop by 20 percent, at a cost savings of about $1,100 per day. The LEED Silver–certified building delivers a 30 percent energy reduction beyond the Model National Energy Code for Buildings and a 32 percent improvement over LEED baseline water use. And the hospital reports a strong qualitative response. In post-occupancy surveys cited by Bridgepoint, a full 100 percent of responding patients said they would recommend the hospital to other patients.

Collaborating again with ERA as well as an additional heritage consultant, Ventin Group, Diamond Schmitt oversaw a sensitive restoration of the Italianate stone structure, designed by local architect William Thomas and opened in 1864, and connected it to the new hospital through a one-story bridge. The symbolism is powerful. The jail, with later additions, held prisoners until 2013; now those later wings have been removed to make way for the hospital’s green spaces and plazas. As Moxam says, “It is an environment for healing people, and it has healed the city as well.” 

Back to Good Design Is Good Business 2016


People

Architect:

Stantec Architecture / KPMB Architects, Planning, Design and Compliance Architects

HDR Architecture / Diamond Schmitt Architects, Design, Build, Finance and Maintain Architects

Stantec Architecture
100-401 Wellington Street West
Toronto, Ontario
M5V 1E7
T: (416) 596-6686
F: (416) 596-6680

KPMB Architects
322 King Street West
Third Floor
Toronto, Canada
M5V 1J2
Phone 416-977-5104
Fax 416-598-9840

HDR Architecture
255 Adelaide Street West
Toronto, ON M5H 1X9
Canada
Phone (647) 777-4900
Fax (647) 777-4901

Diamond Schmitt Architects
384 Adelaide St. W, Suite 300
Toronto, ON M5V 1R7
+1 416 862 8800

 

Personnel in architect's firm who should receive special credit:

Stantec Architecture: Michael Moxam* (principal-in-charge), Stuart Elgie* (principal, project architect), Jane Wigle* (healthcare planning lead), Deanna Brown*, Sylvia Kim*, Norma Angel*, Rich Hlava*, Ko Van Klaveren*, Tim Lee

KPMB Architects: Bruce Kuwabara* (partner-in-charge), Mitchell Hall* (principal, project architect), Judy Taylor*, Kevin Thomas, Glenn MacMullin, Paulo Rocha, Lilly Liaukus

HDR Architecture: Craig Ellis (project principal), Rodel Misa (senior project manager), Tod Trigg (senior project manager), Stewart Earle* (senior architect), Neil Sutton (senior project architect), Brian Archer (architectural coordinator), Hyounjung Ahn, Ellen Rogojine, Jesus Santos, Andy Wong

Diamond Schmitt Architects: A.J. Diamond* (executive principal), Greg Colucci* (principal-in-charge), Antra Roze* (associate/project architect), Jeong Choe, Kirsten Douglas*, Gilda Giovane*, Chris Hoyt*, Brian McClean*, Giuseppe Mandarino, Dale McDowell*

* indicates that the individual is a Registered Architect

 

Engineers:

Planning, Design and Compliance Team:
• Stantec Consulting (Structural/Electrical/Sustainable Design & Energy Efficiency)
• The Mitchell Partnership (Mechanical)

Design, Build, Finance and Maintain Team:
• A.M. Candaras Associates (civil engineer)
• Halsall & Associates (Structural, LEED, Building Envelope)
• Smith + Andersen (Electrical, Mechanical)

 

Consultants

Planning, Design and Compliance Team:
• Aercoustics Engineering Ltd. (Acoustics/Noise/Vibration)
• Agnew Peckham (Functional Programming)
• Archeological Services (Archeological)
• BA Consulting Group Ltd. (Traffic and Transportation)
• Bruce Tree Expert Co. Ltd. (Arborist)
• CFMS Consulting Inc. (Commissioning)
• Clifford Restoration (Heritage Contractor)
• Golder Associates (Environmental)
• McCarthy Tetrault (Municipal Legal Advisor)
• PFS Studio (Landscape)
• Randall Brown & Associates (Life Safety/Code)
• RV Anderson Associates Ltd. (Site Servicing)
• Urban Strategies Inc. (Urban Planning)

Design, Build, Finance and Maintain Team:
• BVDA Façade Engineering Ltd  (building envelope consultant)
• J.E. Coulter Associates (Acoustics/Noise/Vibration)
• Leber Rubes (Life Safety/Code)
• Read Voorhees & Associates (Traffic and Transportation)
• Rowan Williams Davies & Irwin (Environmental)
• Terraprobe Inc. (Geotechnical)
• The MBTW Group  (landscape architects)

 

General contractor: PCL Constructors Canada

 

Photographer:

Nic Lehoux: © Nic Lehoux Photography T: 646.808.7535

Tom Arban: © Tom Arban Photography T: 416.566.9409

Maris Mezulis: © Maris Mezulis E: studio@marismezulis.com

Geoff Grenville: © Kalloon Photography T: 905-849-1339

Sam Javanrouh: © Sam Javanrouh T: 416 624-8473

 

Client:

Bridgepoint Health

 

Size:

680,000 square feet

 

Cost:

$622 million

 

Completion date:

April 2013 

 

 

Products

Cladding:

Ledgerock


Flooring:

Marmoleum; Johnsonite; Franklin Terrazzo


Interior surfaces:

LG; Caesarstone;

Wilsonart; Stone Tile


Ceiling:

Decoustics 

 
KEYWORDS: Architectural Record 2016 Good Design is Good Business Awards Toronto

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Alex Bozikovic is the architecture critic for The Globe and Mail and author of Toronto Architecture: A City Guide.

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