South Bay Family Health Care


Location: South Bay, California
Status: Unbuilt
Square footage: 20,000 sq ft


 

Location: South Bay, California
Status: Unbuilt
Square footage: 20,000 sq ft


South Bay Family Health Care

 

FAMILY HEALTHCARE MEDICAL BUILDING 
FOR A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION

Serving Underprivileged Families and Individuals

    
Conceptual Design Challenges:

• Create a calming and welcoming environment through the use of landscaping and natural light

• Provide natural ventilation where possible to all interior spaces 

• Provide a secured outdoor patient waiting area which physically and visually connect indoor space to outdoor space

• Develop a strong passive solar design solution, which protects from the harsh direct sun, while allowing for views and providing passive heating opportunities in the winter


The South Bay Family Health Care Center is a nonprofit medical office building serving the underprivileged community. 

The project site is located at Western and 120th Street; it has four unobstructed elevations, which call for a strong passive solar design solution. The building elevations are articulated to protect from the harsh summer sun, while still allowing for views, and providing passive heating opportunities in the winter. 

The microclimate in South Bay is important to recognize in the context of sustainability. The natural habitat experiences swings in temperature both seasonally and diurnally. Sustainable design elements like healing gardens, courtyards and naturally ventilated portions of the proposed family clinic are important. The design responds to these natural elements impacting the campus environment. 

A focus on indoor-outdoor connections is a key design feature of the medical office building, specifically with the outdoor waiting area for children.  These indoor-outdoor connections are enhanced by providing access to landscaping visually through sight lines and physically by making exterior gardens easily accessible from the interior spaces. The secured exterior landscaped waiting patio connects directly to the interior waiting room.  The indoor-outdoor connection is further enhanced by the glazed façade flooding public spaces with natural light.  Large skylights also bring natural light into the second floor exam rooms and medical offices.  A sun shading louver system on the south side of the building diffuses indirect light and preserves outdoor views to the surrounding context. 

The design promotes a more welcoming environment for patients, doctors, nurses, and staff by departing from the traditional institutional healthcare architecture. This is done by focusing on patient experience, while providing an environmentally sustainable building design. 

The non-institutional character of the medical office building is accomplished by an elegant vocabulary of glass that floods the public spaces with natural light.  The glazed façade also allows a visual connection to the surrounding context and an outdoor garden.  The outdoor landscaped waiting area animates the lobby and refines the concept of waiting.