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AGi architects

AGi architects

Madrid, ES | Kuwait, KW

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Hisham A. Alsager Cardiac Center by AGi architects will compete for a WAF Award in the Completed Buildings Health category

By AGi architects
Jul 5, '16 7:05 AM EST
Hisham A. Alsager Cardiac Center - © Nelson Garrido
Hisham A. Alsager Cardiac Center - © Nelson Garrido

  • AGi architects have extensive experience at the WAF Awards with four prizes in various categories, including the WAF Award 2014 in the Completed Buildings Religion category with “La Ascensión del Señor” Church, in Seville, Spain.
  • Last year Ali Mohammed T. Al-Ghanim Clinic by AGi architects was Highly Commended in the same category in which the design firm competes again this year: Health - Completed Buildings.

Madrid, 5th July 2016. Hisham A. Alsager Cardiac Center by AGi architects, the international design firm led by architects Joaquin Perez-Goicoechea and Nasser Abulhasan, have been shortlisted by the World Architecture Festival to compete for a WAF award 2016 in the Completed Buildings Health category. The project, built in Kuwait, will face other seven finalists located in Malaysia, Australia, Singapore, United Kingdom, Denmark and Sweden.

Now in its ninth year, this year's awards received more entries than ever before. The 343 strong shortlist includes projects from 58 countries across 32 categories. All finalists will go on to compete at the World Architecture Festival in November in Berlin, after four editions held in Singapore.

AGi architects’ experience in health architecture has been awarded with several WAF prizes in previous editions. Last year, Ali Mohammed T. Al-Ghanim Clinic was Highly Commended in the Completed Buildings Health category, and this project had already won the WAF Award 2013 in the Future Projects Health category, when it was under construction. Also the Kuwait Children's Hospital won the WAF award 2010 in the Future Projects Health category.

According to Joaquín Pérez-Goicoechea, partner and co-founder of AGi architects, “the whole team is very happy that Hisham A. Alsager Cardiac Center is among the finalists for a WAF Award this year. Now both Nasser and I will do our best to show the judges the differential values of the project and why it deserves to be recognized”.

AGi architects, an international design firm based in Spain and Kuwait, will present its project to a panel of WAF judges between the 16th and 18th of November at the Festival in Berlin. The winners of each category are put forward to compete for the coveted World Building or Future Project of the Year award, presided over by the festival’s ‘super-jury’, with the presentation of the award being the culmination of WAF 2014 on Friday, 18 November.

Hisham A. Alsager Cardiac Center

Medical buildings are usually perceived as spaces with negative connotations, specifically when referring to rehabilitation centers where patients stay for long periods of time. Therefore, in the design process of the Hisham A. Alsager Cardiac Center, AGi architects’ aim was to change this perception and to build a positive space, one that is able to act as a hub for social activity, rather than just a medical center.  

At this point, the first element to consider was the exterior of the building (including the volume and its materiality) as it is the first connection point between the patient, medical center and the environment. Instead of treating the general volume as a mere container of functions, AGi architects developed a proposal that is formally similar to one of social and cultural infrastructure. A sharp volume that contains two large red openings in the façade, these invite access to the building and suggests to the visitor what they will find inside. The stone clad façade provides the necessary protection for the harsh weather of Kuwait and ensures a highly sustainable performance with low maintenance. 

The anatomic scheme of the heart and its mechanism within the whole human body was used for the design of the project. The heart is the central muscle of the system, which pumps blood to nourish the rest of organs and cells within it. The heart is present in the design of the central atrium: a three storeys height red coloured space onto which the waiting areas and circulations open to. Several courtyards provide the space with natural light to experience the spacious architecture, in contrast with smaller rooms that are usually found in this kind of buildings. Patients move to and from this central space (the source of light and life), as red blood cells do, and are received in the clinics and different departments to be put back in the circulatory system once re-oxygenated. Cardiovascular medicine, its basis, and even the aesthetic of its tools have been used to write an architectural script that allows us to propose a different kind of healthcare building, with an experiential attitude, that takes into account the specific needs of users (patients and workers) in trying to making their stay in the hospital as easier as possible.

Clinics, grouped in three levels at the south part of the building, are disposed as small specialized self-managed cells (managed by one doctor and his team), and have three spaces: two exam rooms and one consult office, with their own waiting area. Each “cell” is organized between courtyards, providing all rooms with natural light, ventilation, and privacy for each one. Patients and workers access to the clinics from different ways to improve circulatory efficiency.

Specialized rehabilitation areas (pool, gym, running track, etc.), research and administration services of the center are strategically placed at the north of the building, which allow them to open up to the exterior along the Kuwait bay, providing great views of the sea and high quality light conditions. Inside this cluster, the main physical activity spaces are double height in order to show up in the façade and “oxygenate” the experience.