CannonDesign + NEUF architect(e)s

Centre Hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal – CHUM

CannonDesign + NEUF architect(e)s
22. September 2017
La vie en montagne (Photo: Adrien Williams; all images courtesy of v2com)

Project: Centre Hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal – CHUM
Location: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Client: Construction Santé Montréal
Architects/designers: CannonDesign + NEUF architect(e)s
Principals in charge: Jose Silva, AIA and Azad Chichmanian, OAQ
Engineers: Pasquin St-Jean, HH Angus, Groupe SM
Landscape Architects: NIP Paysage
Contractors: Construction Santé Montréal
Area: Approximately 3 million square feet
Budget:  2 billion CAD$ 
Completion of Phase 1: 2017
Completion of Phase 2: 2021

East elevation (Photo: Adrien Williams)

Accelerating public access
Initially structured as a two-phased project, the team reconfigured the indicative design of the campus arrangement and architecture in order to accelerate development significantly. As a result, Phase I, now complete, delivers the hospital’s core healthcare capabilities, including all patient rooms, all operating theatres, diagnostic and therapeutics, as well as the Oncology program, leaving only offices, a conference center, a few ambulatory spaces, and additional parking for Phase 2. This allows the Quebec population to benefit from the much-needed state-of-the-art healthcare infrastructure years sooner than originally anticipated.

View from exchange tower (Photo: Adrien Williams)
West City skyline at dusk (Photo: Adrien Williams)

Human inspiration
With social infrastructure and urban renewal as integral components to its design, the 22-story complex, spanning over 3 million square feet and encompassing two full city blocks, will play an important role in regenerating the neglected East-end of Montreal’s downtown core, reconnecting the city’s urban fabric and anchoring the Quartier de la Santé, Montreal’s new healthcare district. In addressing the totality of that task, the design team approached the project from all scales, including the large-scale urban element, the local neighborhood context, and the fine grain of a human component, central to its vocation as a place of healing.

“Walking through the completed spaces today, we feel a spatial quality that is in line with the ambitions of this great institution,” explains Azad Chichmanian, partner and architect with NEUF architect(e)s. “As the public finally begins to discover the architectural moments that have been created, from the inviting, light-filled public spaces to the state-of-the-art clinical facilities, we believe the building will succeed in completely redefining Montrealers’ image of what a hospital feels like.”

Programmatic diagram (Drawing: CannonDesign + NEUF architect(e)s)
Public interface diagram (Drawing: CannonDesign + NEUF architect(e)s)

Throughout the design process, the team continually pushed the envelope for quality of design, whether in its use of parametric design on the building envelope, the use of 3D-printed models in coordination, an innovative approach to the integration of heritage components, and an intense use of technology to facilitate communication between team members from across the globe.
 
From a healthcare delivery perspective, each of the 772 rooms includes ample space for family involvement, and expansive windows offering some of the best views of the city. Importantly, the entire building is designed following universal design principles, and impressively, the vast majority of the 12,000+ rooms in the building were designed following a small number of standardized room templates. “The creation of such an incredible healthcare facility required our design team to look at the project from numerous perspectives, but we leveraged our health expertise to always keep patient experience at the forefront.” added Silva.

Maison Garth and Saint-Sauveur Steeple (Photo: Adrien Williams)
Saint-Denis Ramp (Photo: Adrien Williams)

Art at the heart of the architecture 
Going well beyond the Quebec government’s requirement of dedicating a minimum of 1% of a public development’s budget to the integration of art, the new CHUM campus will have 13 large-scale works of art incorporated into the design and ultimately house the highest concentration of public art in Montreal since Expo 67.
 
“We have integrated the art directly into the architecture of the complex in ways that blur the lines between the two and provides a more human experience to the visitor and staff”, explains Chichmanian. “In fact, many components of the buildings themselves can be considered as works of art, including the amphitheater, the reconstructed steeple, Maison Garth and the Space of Contemplation—forming a series of architectural objects animating Saint-Denis Street. Perhaps the best example is the passerelle, an aerial bridge now spanning across Sanguinet Street with its translucent arch emerging from the perforations of the copper shroud enveloping it.”

Passerelle at night (Photo: Adrien Williams)
Passerelle interior (Photo: Karine Savard)

Global recognition
Ahead of the opening, the complexities and design of the CHUM project have already garnered significant international accolades. In 2016, the design team was honoured with an Architizer A+Award, as well as an A’ Design Award presented during the European Healthcare Design Forum in London. In June 2017, the team won top prize in the Lighting Installations and People’s Choice categories for the CHUM Passerelle, presented at the AzureAZ Awards before a distinguished gathering of members of international architecture and design communities from around the globe.

In July, both the World Architecture Festival (WAF) and the INSIDE World Festival of Interiors, sister festival of WAF, added the CHUM project to its shortlist in four separate categories. CannonDesign + NEUF architect(e)s will present the project during the three-day festival this November in Berlin. Also in July, CannonDesign + NEUF architect(e)s received a Future Healthy Built Environment award from the Stockholm-based International Academy for Design & Health, and were shortlisted in the category of ‘Facade Design & Engineering’ by the ABB LEAF Awards in London.

Saint-Denis stairs (Photo: Adrien Williams)
Sans titre (L'artiste au travail) (Photo: Adrien Williams)
Roof terrace 8th floor (Photo: Adrien Williams)
Roof terrace 8th floor (Photo: Adrien Williams)
Steeple interior (Photo: Adrien Williams)

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