Archive for the ‘Practice promotion’ Category

18 Jun 2009

Fodder Open for Business

Stacks of local produce

View of Fodder

Inside the café

The new development at The Yorkshire Showground was officially opened last night: it includes superb office accommodation and meeting rooms for the Yorkshire Agricultural Society, along with office space for start up businessses with agricultural links from the region. The really tasty bit though is the farm shop and cafe, where trading is brisk. ’Fodder’ as it is aptly named,  opened its doors to the public earlier this month, and it really is worth a visit:  not only is it located in a great building with lots of eco friendly features, the shop is stacked full of locally sourced fresh and speciality foods.  So if you’re looking for something to do this weekend, take a trip to Harrogate..and fill your baskets (made from recycled plastic of course).

 

9 Jun 2009

P+HS Scoops Best Healthcare Building at LABC Awards

Once again, P+HS have excelled themselves at the LABC Northern Region Building Excellence Awards.  In a glittering ceremony, P+HS  received two commendations for Eaglescliffe Health Centre (with Tolent Construction) and Wrekenton Health Centre (with Laing O’Rourke), and won the Best Healthcare Building overall for Washington Primary Care Centre (also with Laing O’Rourke).   Washington will now go through to the National LABC Awards later in the year.  Congratulations to all involved.  The results were as follows:

Washington Primary Care Centre for Sunderland Teaching PCT- Best Healthcare Building – Overall Winner

Washington Primary Care Centre - Winner

Wrekenton Health Centre for Sunderland Teaching PCT - Commended

Wrekenton Health Centre - Highly Commended

Eaglescliffe Health Centre for Abstract Integrated Healthcare - Commended

Eaglescliffe Health Centre - Commended

7 May 2009

Eaglescliffe Medical Centre Opens


   

Eaglescliffe Medical Centre was officially opened on Tuesday 5th May. Dame Tanni Grey-Thompson was the guest of honour at a well attended ceremony with representatives from all the building’s stakeholders. The Centre was developed by Abstract Integrated Healthcare and constructed by Tolent. One of the senior GP’s, Krysia Ellenger, described her feelings about the new building designed by the P+HS team.

” Just what the doctor ordered ! A building that so intimately reflects our vision and our ethos . A place of light, of healing, of comfort. A building that exudes quality, calmness and soothes pain. A building that is ambitious, that reflects the modernity of medicine, of ever expanding knowledge and yet it embraces the human side. A building that encourages wisdom, is kind to the soul and has context . ”

I think that sums it up! It’s a great example of team working delivering clients’ aspirations. Well done to everyone involved.
Photography by Doug Jackson

20 Mar 2009

Green Roof in Yorkshire

Sedum Roof at Yorkshire Agricultural Centre

Sedum Roof at Yorkshire Agricultural Centre

Following Ben’s post on green roofs, here’s the sedum one at the Yorkshire Agricultural Centre.  The intrepid Heather Parry is pictured with Stuart Falshaw giving the roof some TLC.  This piece was in the Yorkshire Post on 14th March.

5 Mar 2009

The Versatility of P+HS Staff

One minute they’re designing fantastic buildings such as the new Regional Agriculture Centre at the Yorkshire Showground, the next they’re using their natural calming influence over one of the raw material suppliers: this is a reference to the sheep NOT the client!

In this picure Heather Parry of the Yorkshire Agricultural Society and Eamon Shutt of P+HS at a photocall promoting the sheepswool insulation used in this highly sustainable building.

One Architect and his Sheep

One Architect and his Sheep

26 Feb 2009

Yorkshire’s Top Architects

The annual league table for Yorkshire’s Top Architects is published in today’s Yorkshire Post.  P+HS now ranks 7th in the county, demonstrating yet again the practice’s commitment to sustained growth.

31 Mar 2008

Lighting up damaged lives ~ Walkergate Park in BD

“The recently complete Walkergate Hospital in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne is providing a revolutionary combination of facilities for people with neurological disabilities, and a therapeutic physical environment that is being studied for its impact on patient outcomes.”

BD features Walkergate Park in March. Completed by Team Bentley, this unique facility is receiving lots of praise. Have a look at the article here

17 Dec 2007

Housing Design Awards

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Design for Homes runs an awards system each year. Backed by the Home Builders Federation, CABE, Design for Homes, English Partnerships, the Housing Corporation and the Civic Trust, the awards celebrate well designed homes and neighbourhoods. Have a look here for details of the winners in 2007.

The criteria for good schemes can be found here – a good test against which to judge all our schemes? The link includes details of what they describe as “great schemes”. This guide should be referred to when completing a Building for Life standard application. It can also be used by developers as a basis for writing development briefs, and by local authorities to demand high standards of design and assess design quality.

Suggestions from us for 2008 entries to Claire Bedford please – entries due in before the end of February.

14 Sep 2007

Mater Dei Hospital Malta

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Mater Dei Hospital is a new acute hospital on Malta. When completed the new hospital project will have a total floor area of 232,000m² and approximately 8,000 rooms. The hospital will also be used as a teaching facility by the neighbouring University of Malta.

Resources in Malta have always been scarce, which is why environmental considerations have played a key role in the development of the Mater Dei Hospital.

In keeping with the environmental considerations, which have played such a role in the hospital’s development, this will be the first building in Malta with insulated external walls and with high performance glass in the windows. These will reduce cooling costs between April and November and heating costs during the other months.

Rainwater will be collected, stored and used for irrigation. Low flush toilets and environmentally adapted refrigerants will be used as well as polypropylene (PP) piping. In addition, there will be an effort to reduce electromagnetic fields at the hospital by various means.

Construction waste will be separated at source so the Maltese authorities can arrange further recycling. Preparations will be made for the recycling of topsoil from excavation work, as well as stones from the demolition of stone walls.

During the construction, trees that would have normally been cut down have instead been moved and re-planted at other sites. Rubble walls and buildings of cultural heritage value have been moved and rebuilt in a safe environment. As many as ten different kinds of waste are being sorted and recycled. Excavated material is partly used on site as road base and surplus material is used to refill an excavated quarry, which will later be used as an orange plantation.

The Mater Dei hospital is set to have air conditioning in every room and that is what will take the biggest toll on Malta’s energy bill. A spokesperson for the Foundation for Medical Service confirmed that, “each and every room of the hospital will be air conditioned as well as certain plant areas. Other areas such as corridors and service areas will be air-conditioned indirectly or not at all.”

It also seems that while those who planned and approved the hospital development did consider energy saving, renewable sources of energy were not considered, although solar power could apparently cut the emissions and energy bill considerably.

The Foundation’s spokesperson said: “No solar or renewable power use is envisaged but the design includes energy saving features such as: double glazing and UV blocks on windows; use of variable speed drives; heat recovery from chillers and air handling units; use of condensation from air-handling units; electronic ballasts on fluorescent lighting fixtures; a building automation system and other features.”

Help from the UK

The senior planning team from James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough has been helping with the migration plan [arranged by the Department of Health’s International Consultancy Division], moving all the staff, patients, equipment and furniture from the old St Luke’s Hospital across to Mater Dei. JCUH is a similar size and has recently been the subject of a similar move, so the expertise is really valuable. Middlesbrough is also a similar size in population terms to Malta at around 400,000; the climate is not similar!

P+HS opportunities

Chris P has been out in Malta at the invitation of the Maltese Government’s Foundation for Medical Service to look at the new hospital and discuss the possibility of working together on a new 200 bed rehabilitation hospital, and the redevelopment of their primary care estate.

 

 

16 Nov 2006

Designer sought for new Middlesbrough landscape

A competition to design a new ‘prototype’ landscape which could be built throughout Middlesbrough has been launched today.
The A66 Gateway Project contest hopes to attract architects and masterplanners to come up with innovative proposals to revamp the public realm at the Cargo Fleet transport interchange site in the east of the town.

If successful, Middlesbrough Council hopes that the ‘treatment developed and prototyped’ on this plot could be used throughout the ‘A66 roadscape’ across the town.

Up to five shortlisted practices will be invited to go through to the final design phase of the contest, which is being organised by the RIBA’s competition office.

Each of these five finalists will be handed a £3,000 honorarium to help them develop a full design presentation.

The deadline for entries is 8 January 2007.

Further information can be found at either www.ted.europa.eu (reference 2006/S 218-234279) or from the RIBA’s competition office: www.architecture.com

17 Oct 2006

Top 100 architects

Once again P+HS is in the Top 100 Architects and in the top 250 Consultants in the UK.

The annual survey, carried out by Building Magazine, reflects the size and quality of firms, looking at size, turnover and profitability. For more details have a look at at this week’s issue – Friday 13th October. Details of how to log on to the Building [and other websites] will be posted on “Links” shortly.

28 Sep 2006

Top 10 Medical Workload Win

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P+HS made the top 10 in the Architect’s Journal survey of firms winning medical work.

The AJ survey, carried out independently by Glenigan, list the top 10 practices for each workload category for work won in the last 12 months. The figures are based on work actually won and signed off, not just scheme bidding.