Texas A&M environmental design students recently unveiled design proposals for a new Honduran public hospital to representatives from the Honduran government and potential project donors at a public design review. The event took place beneath a rotunda at the school’s George Bush Presidential Library and Museum.
Designs for the hospital, a proposed replacement of an outdated facility serving approximately 100,000 people who live on Roatán Island, approximately 35 miles from Honduras’ northern coast, were created by teams composed of students from a spring 2015 architecture-for-health studio led by George J. Mann, professor of architecture and from an undergraduate environmental design studio led by Zhipeng Lu, architecture lecturer. The project teams were:
- Andrea Balandran, Leticia Meza, Mayra Millan, Laura Ruiz, Martha Salinas and Cullen Smith
- Amie Akers, Callie Friesenhahn, Paige Gibson and Mckenzie Watson
- Victoria Codrington, Megan Girvan, Jeremiah Gonzalez and Norma Montoya
- Dulce Castillo, Evelyn Chavez, Angelica Hernandez, Jessica Luchak and Jessica Sovereen
- Odette Leal and Kayli Yentzen
- Roberto Diaz, Seulki Hong, Melyna Montoya and Cristian Rodriguez
Students were introduced to the project early last February during an all-day session with three of the hospital’s physicians who have extensive experience providing healthcare on the island. The physicians, Raymond Cherington, Patrick Connell and Howard Gruber, detailed the need for a design specific to Roatán’s tropical climate, geography and culture to help them provide the best care for inpatient and outpatient adults, children and infants.
Cherington, a Roatán native and the hospital’s medical director, Connell, an emergency medicine physician and Gruber, a pediatrician and the past medical director of Global Healing’s Roatán Program, worked with the students in weekly Skype meetings as the semester progressed. Students sent the physicians their latest plans; they studied them and provided feedback.
“They inspired us with their ideas and infectious enthusiasm,” said Connell.
The student designers received guidance about the project’s architectural layout and programming from Jason Schroer, principal and director of HKS Inc.’s Houston, Texas office.
The final designs, to occupy a 60,000-square-foot site, include a laboratory, imaging and surgical suites, labor and delivery rooms, an intensive care unit and a helipad adjacent to an emergency room.
“They did a great job creating designs suitable for the local climate,” said Gruber. “Students researched the weather and geographic conditions in Roatán, situating buildings so that they would be partially ventilated by breezes created by the area’s trade winds.”
Students proposed using local materials for construction, and included slanted roofs in their designs to deal with the island’s seasonal torrential rainfall, as well as space for emergency generators, since power failures are common on the island, he said.
Having the plans is important to keep the project moving ahead, said Gruber.
“Potential donors want to see a building proposal before they commit funds, and we’ll be able to show them seven different project models and designs,” he said.
In creating plans, students were also advised by Bita Kash, Texas A&M associate professor of health policy and management, and Lesley Tomaszewski, clinical assistant professor at Mays Business School. In addition, Ronald L. Skaggs, chairman emeritus of HKS, and Joseph G. Sprague, HKS senior vice president and director of health facilities, provided direction for the students.
For more details, visit http://one.arch.tamu.edu/news/2015/4/20/island-hospital/.
Images courtesy of College of Architecture, Texas A&M University.