Photo © Werner Huthmacher Photography
Photo © Werner Huthmacher Photography
Photo © Werner Huthmacher Photography
Photo © Werner Huthmacher Photography
Photo © Werner Huthmacher Photography
Photo © Werner Huthmacher Photography
Photo © Werner Huthmacher Photography
Photo © Werner Huthmacher Photography
Photo © Werner Huthmacher Photography
Photo © Werner Huthmacher Photography

Psychiatric Centre in Friedrichshafen

 Back to Projects list
Location
Röntgenstraße 8, 88048 Friedrichshafen, Germany
Year
2011
Beds
76
Gross floor area
5.555 m²
Costs
10,1 Mio EUR
Time frame
2008 - 2010
Competetion
2008, 1st price
Cooperation
BERNARD und SATTLER Landschaftsarchitekten
Project-team
Julian Arons, Magdalena Falska, António Henriques, Christian Huber, Leander Moons, Jördis Petzold, Joachim Staudt, Sofia Theodor
Award
"best architects 14" | Award AKG-Award outstanding health buildings 2013

The new psychiatric centre lies embedded into the campus of Friedrichshafen Hospital and follows the picturesque, orchard-laden, natural slope of the hill towards Lake Constance. The building encloses a generously dimensioned green courtyard and exploits typologically the contour of the hillside by providing entrances on two different levels. A wide spanning bridge frames the generous view into the undulating landscape and helps to emphasise the natural slope even within the sheltered courtyard. The psychiatric centre can be easily perceived from the landscape while enabling picturesque views of the countryside from within. Large central therapy rooms with direct access to the patients´ garden are arranged on the lower floor by exploiting the possibilities of natural illumination along the slope.

The main building of the hospital, constructed in the 1960s, dominates the extensive grounds of the campus. The adjacent singular buildings of both the Kindergarten and the residential developments relate orthogonally to the hospital. The proposed expansion of the campus through the Mother-Child Centre, the Medical Centre and the Radiotherapy Centre emphasise in their orientation the pedestrian-friendly character of the campus. The new Psychiatric Centre arranges itself as a significant figure in this system. The entrance area between the new build and the existing hospital provides a high level of amenity and invites patients, visitors and employees of the hospital to linger.

The two materials, fair-faced concrete and untreated wood, dominate the surfaces of the building both internally and externally. Concrete is treated in a sophisticated way: large flat board-marked concrete surfaces and fine horizontal linear prefabricated elements, corresponding with the vertical fins of the wooden cladding. The timber cladding is made of untreated silver fir as a reference to the local building tradition, particularly in the nearby Vorarlberg region of Austria. The vertical cladding, comprised of untreated wooden profiles, lends the building, through its transparency, an airy and open appearance.

The compact design with low surface area leads to low energy consumption due to reduced heat loss and thus to economic follow-up costs. The intensively greened roof offers optimum thermal insulation in winter and summer, leads to a low degree of surface sealing, offers advantages in the seepage of rain and condensation water and improves the quality of stay.

Beds
76

Gross area
5.555 m2

Building costs
10,1 Mio. EUR

Time
2008-2010

Competition
2008, 1st prize

Cooperation
BERNARD und SATTLER Landschaftsarchitekten

Team
Julian Arons, Magdalena Falska, António Henriques, Christian Huber, Leander Moons, Jördis Petzold, Joachim Staudt, Sofia Theodorou

Awards
"best architects 14" Award
AKG-Auszeichnung herausragender Gesundheitsbauten 2013
AIT Award 2012
Beispielhaftes Bauen Bodenseekreis

Other Projects by huber staudt architekten bda

Kindertagesstätte in Nürnberg
Nürnberg, Germany
District Hospital in Lohr am Main
Lohr am Main, Germany
Friedrich Engels Grammar School
Berlin, Germany
High School for Motor Car Technology
Berlin, Germany
Wichern-Hospital, Ev. Johannesstift
Berlin, Germany