Copenhagen Centre for Cancer and Health

Background: Getting cancer is like embarking on a journey, you don’t know where will end. It requires strength to cope with the disease and take on the new identity as a cancer patient. Research shows that architecture can have a positive effect on people’s recovery from sickness. A human scale and a welcoming atmosphere can help people to get better. Despite of this, most hospitals are hardly comfy. Just finding the way from the reception to the canteen can be difficult. If we want people to get better at our hospitals, we need to deinstitutionalize and create a welcoming healthcare.
Design concepts: The Healthcare Center for Cancer Patients in Copenhagen is conceived as an iconic building, which create awareness of cancer without stigmatizing the patients. Designed as a number of small houses combined into one, the center provides the space needed for a modern health facility, without losing the comforting scale of the individual. The houses are connected by raised roof shaped like a Japanese paper art origami, which gives the building a characteristic signature. Entering the building you find yourself in a comfy lounge area manned by volunteers. From here you move onto the others parts of the house, which includes a courtyard for contemplation, spaces for exercises, a common kitchen where you can learn to cook healthy food, meeting rooms for patients groups etc.

Copenhagen Centre for Cancer and Health complies with Danish building standards, which encompasses energy savings, as well as a low carbon footprint by connecting to a district heating system.
The Centre displays environmental awareness by using a sustainable drainage system LAR (local rainwater drainage), that diverts the rainwater locally, relieves sewer systems and increases groundwater resources, hereby contributing to biodiversity. In addition to this, the facades and landscape tiling are environmentally certified.