Hospital for Daiichi Hospital
Daiichi Hospital is moving to the new replacement building of its older blocks. The new design explores the idea of breaking up the monolithic blocks of modern hospitals without losing the functionality aspect crucial to a healthcare facility. The hospital is located along the national road No. 2. The north facade is designed to look like a thin sheet with playful random width window openings. A series of surface duplication slides toward the east creating an open book effect as an angle treatment and signaling the building's main entrance.
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Download Press Kit № 161228 Hospital for Daiichi Hospital by Tetsuya Matsumoto to access high-res images, essential texts, translations, and exclusive interviews—all in one.
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For Daiichi, find press releases in a variety of languages: English.
Access our collection of Daiichi articles, ready for use and offered in languages: Dutch, Italian, Arabic (Standard), Hindi, English, Spanish, French, German, Chinese (Mandarin), Portuguese, Indonesian, Japanese, Turkish, Korean and Russian.
The new replacement building for Himeji Daiichi Hospital is built next to the late 1960s block that is planned to be demolished after moving to the new building. The idea behind this project is to bring some modernity and lightness to the old institution and to change the heavy monolithic image of hospital buildings. This is done by creating a porous facade that is treated as a sheet and repeated to create the depth of the building.
Japan, hospital, white, reception, green, architecture, interior, medical, clinic, reception
The 7 stories building is supported by a grid of metallic beams and pillars. Since Japan is prone to earthquakes the building is design with extra safety measure. The facade is covered by cladding panels from KMEW. The interior is built using drywall techniques and was finished with a variety of materials including tiles, vinyl floor, vinyl wall cloth, wooden panels, platina panels, melamine board, and mirrors.
The challenge of this project is to design and build a fully functional 100 beds hospital that responds to the newest Japanese regulations regarding earthquake and fire safety, using a very limited budget and yet produce a space that tends more towards hospitality rather then medical. Finding the middle ground between small luxury, efficiency, cost effectiveness, limited footprint, and extremely regulated spaces.
Project start: July 2018. Construction starts: December 2021. Project/Construction End: March 2023. Location: Himeji City, Japan.
The entrance opens to the reception counter followed by to the waiting area that faces a series of consulting and treatment rooms. It also contains medical imaging area and an emergency area also accessible from a dedicated entrance. The second floor is occupied by the dialyzes room, operating area, and dispensing services. The following floors are for the inpatient rooms. The sixth floor houses the rehabilitation room, the kitchen and dining areas, and offices. The seventh floor is technical.
The main challenge with this project is to break up with the monolithic block representative of modern hospitals and shift the interior towards a more anxiety free hospitality driven spaces. While aiming to achieve this the design needed to still obey the very strict healthcare functionality of a modern hospital and keep the tight budget under control. The available land area had an irregular shape creating efficiency complications that needed to be overcome.
The design was inspired by its site. the shape of the available land area and its angular position toward the main road inspired the repetition of the main facade in several layers as a corner treatment that would be an eye catcher for the people driving along the road but also for the pedestrians walking by. The white color dominance is inspired by the cleanliness, the hygiene, and its psychological effect on the patients.
Image #1: photographer ©Nacasa & partners Inc, Daiichi Hospital, 2023. Image #2: photographer ©Nacasa & partners Inc, Daiichi Hospital, 2023. Image #3: photographer ©Nacasa & partners Inc, Daiichi Hospital, 2023. Image #4: photographer ©Nacasa & partners Inc, Daiichi Hospital, 2023. Image #5: photographer ©Nacasa & partners Inc, Daiichi Hospital, 2023.
Daiichi Hospital has been a Silver winner in the Architecture, Building and Structure Design award category in the year 2023 organized by the prestigious A' Design Award & Competition. The Silver A' Design Award celebrates top-tier designs that embody excellence and innovation. This award acknowledges creations that are not only aesthetically pleasing but also highly functional, reflecting the designer's deep understanding and skill. Silver A' Design Award recipients are recognized for their contribution to raising industry standards and advancing the practice of design. Their work often incorporates original innovations and elicits a strong emotional response, making a notable impact on the improvement of everyday life.
Tetsuya Matsumoto was recognized with the coveted Silver A' Design Award in 2024, a testament to excellence of their work Daiichi Hospital.
Media members, dive into our press releases on Tetsuya Matsumoto's work, ready for you to use and enhance your journalistic content. Press members can now immediately access 13 press releases.
Introducing the Innovative Daiichi Hospital Design by Tetsuya Matsumoto
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