Description
It is hard to tell which aspect of the district hospital is most fascinating: its elegant design, the humanitarian ideals that inspired it or the involvement of the community in order to get it built. US
Situated on a high hill that formerly housed military barracks, the hospital has been conceived as a collection of buildings that form a medical campus. The hospital has 140 beds, an outpatient cancer infusion center, housing for doctors and nurses and ample landscaped areas for the patients, their families and staff to enjoy.
Hygiene and infection control were the building’s primary design criteria. Specifically targeting airborne agents spreading infectious diseases, the design integrates a sophisticated system of natural ventilation with louvered windows that is supported by large industrial-grade fans that increase airflow and germ-killing UV lamps. Since hospital air is seen as the main cause of nosocomial diseases, it has to be continually replaced by fresh air from outside. The system refreshes the air 12 times per hour, meeting the minimum requirements of the World Health Organization. The entire building is designed to perform even during power outages. Since overcrowded corridors increase the risk of infections, hallways were minimized. The principal traffic infrastructure makes full use of the open spaces between the separate volumes, connecting several of them with covered pedestrian walkways and waiting spaces. The hospital’s dominant architectural feature is the use of dark, volcanic stone, a local material whose application to a building façade was pioneered at Butaro, resulting in beautifully textured walls. The seemingly unstructured, rough pattern of the stones, which are stacked with minimal use of mortar, offers a striking contrast with the neat, rectangular openings of windows and doors, and with the plastered walls, the ceilings and the floor. Color is used to create bright accents throughout the building.
Drawings
Lower level
Upper level
Section through the site
Photos

View from the north toward the intensive care unit and the post-operative ward

Interior view of the patient ward
Originally published in: Cor Wagenaar, Noor Mens, Guru Manja, Colette Niemeijer, Tom Guthknecht, Hospitals: A Design Manual, Birkhäuser, 2018.