HOUSTON, Texas — WHR Architects has opened its first European office in Copenhagen, Denmark. The decision to locate in the Danish capital was spurred by the Danish healthcare system’s initiative to renew and expand their facilities across the country.
Haas first met a Danish healthcare team on a study mission to the United States at an American College of Healthcare Architect’s conference in 2011. As a result of that meeting, WHR helped to organize a visit to Houston to tour the newest hospital and research facilities in the Texas Medical Center, as well as benchmarking visits to other notable medical facilities in the U.S.
“WHR’s interest in the Danish healthcare initiative and their support as we researched best-of-class facilities demonstrated WHR’s deep understanding of the issues and their collegial approach,” notes Adam Trier Jacobsen, MAA, DA, FRICS, the Danish architect who first met with Haas and who is now working with WHR. “After our visits in the states, we invited WHR to come to Denmark to study the healthcare initiative and to see the current facilities first-hand.”
Those initial meetings revealed a mutual interest in developing a new international model for healthcare facilities that would leverage not only WHR’s expertise and resources, but also the strengths of leading thinkers and designers from many critical disciplines and multiple countries including Denmark. “While we believe our experience and expertise offers great value to the Danish healthcare system, we recognize that we have much to learn from the European architects and engineers whose work consistently earns them commissions and accolades worldwide,” said David Watkins, FAIA, chairman and founding principal of WHR Architects.
In August WHR, teamed with Denmark’s Bjarke Ingels Group and the international engineering team ARUP, garnered a coveted spot on the shortlist for the second phase of the design completion for the Nyt Hospital Nordsjælland, a 124,000-square-meter (1.3-million-square-foot) acute care hospital in Hillerød.
WHR was also awarded a contract for the design of the new laboratory and logistics building at Bispebjerg Hospital near Copenhagen as part of a team that includes the Danish firm Mikkelsen Architects and ARUP. That project brings together 14,000 square meters (150,694 square feet) of clinical and research laboratory spaces together under one roof. In addition to laboratories, the new building will contain logistics warehouse facilities, teaching facilities and a central biorepository. The logistics warehouse facilities will be designed to serve the future somatic hospital.