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Home > Library > 2007 Student Health Design Awards > Bridget BashamAFH 2007 Student Health Design Awards WINNER: Jonathan Pugh JOINT SECOND PRIZE: JOINT SECOND PRIZE: SHORT LISTED OTHER PARTICIPANTS Bridget Basham, who is currently studying at The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, entered the Architects for Health's First Student Health Design Award (2007) with the following submission. For contact please email: rigedij@gmail.com Inventia Nursing Home, Inverloch, Australia Inverloch is an archetypal, Australian coastal town. The community's largest threat is a physical invasion from retirees. These new dwellers inhabit the town's coastal parcels, pushing locals into a microcosm of suburban sprawl. The coexistence of these two physically separate inhabitants, contribute to a cancerous-like growth. Inventia Nursing Home tries to address some of the issues surrounding the collision between:
Inventia responds by:
Inventia is wedged between Inverloch's town centre and the industrial estate; between northerly residential sprawl and the Bass Coast Highway, beyond all of which is the fertile South Gippsland pastoral landscape. These contextual adjacencies promoted diversification of the nursing home's traditional programmatic requirements, helping to explore the tension between the Institution and the Individual.
Three sheltered cloisters form the heart of Inventia. These house residents with the highest care needs. The formation of the cloisters grew from a series of early models/ research/ seminars that explored the potential of the service corridor as a place of meeting, with particular attention paid to the specific needs of dementia residents. Colour, texture, light, vegetation and animals play a vital role in humanizing, orientating and stimulating residents. Each cloister was conceived as a large thoroughfare room where internal arrangement is dictated by both efficient/ meandering circulation and views into the park. The cloisters are comprised of autonomous residential units/ nominal facilities stringed together by a translucent skin, housed under a Big Roof. Formally echoing buildings within the industrial estate/ sheds of the surrounding dairy farms; the cloisters aim to express the tension that exists between the Institution and the Individual.
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