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We know that buildings can make us sick,
and that they can also make us healthier. But can architecture make a
difference in how we experience illness? What about cancer? That's a
more complicated question.
At an exhibition at the New York School of Interior Design
this month, we get a glimpse of an usual set of cancer care facilities
called Maggie's Centres. These buildings happen to be designed by the
most famous architects in the world, who normally limit their clients to
major cultural institutions and wealthy individuals, not charities. For
example, one of the most recent centers to open, in Aberdeen, was
designed by the Norwegian architects Snøhetta and looks more like a home than a hospital:
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Images: Philip Vile.
How
did these buildings come to be? In 1995, the famous architectural
historian Charles Jencks' wife passed away after a struggle with breast
cancer. Before she died, Maggie Keswick Jencks spent more than a year
developing an idea for a network of care centers that would give
patients access to stress-reducing activities, support groups,
information and more. These wouldn't be hospitals, exactly, but more
like home bases, points of contact and support for patients outside of
wards.
The
year after she died, the first Maggie's Centre opened in Edinburgh. And
nearly 20 years later, there are dozens, each designed by a different
notable architect, many of whom were longtime friends of the Jencks,
like Pritzker Prize winner Richard Rogers, who designed a Maggie's
Centre in London:
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Photos: Nick Turner.
So
how do these buildings purport to improve cancer care? It's nothing
complex: All of the centers are filled with light, windows, and
welcoming, intimate spaces for meetings and events. According to their
architects, the idea is simply to bring a bit of dignity to the struggle
of being a patient, to break up the succession of sterile white-walled
corridors and fluorescent lights with a space that looks more like a
home.
Rem
Koolhaas and OMA designed a Maggie's Centre in Glasgow in 2011—the
low-lying building is a ring of small, wood and glass-lined spaces that
open out into a big garden:
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Photos: Nick Turner.
Maggie's Centre Cheltenham, which was designed by MJP Architects,
sits five minutes away from the actual hospital but looks more like a
lodge, with meeting rooms, fireplaces, a kitchen, a reading nook, and
more:
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At
the same time, Maggie's Centre isn't without its critics. After all,
think of the controversy that homeopathic treatments and other
unconventional approaches to cancer care stir up. For example, when
Frank Gehry opened a center in Dundee in 2003, some wondered whether it
was over the top.
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"As
the idea has taken off, so Jencks has come under fire from both the
scientific community, who question the validity of his claims (or media
distortions of them)," wondered the Guardian in 2010,
"and the design community, who wonder if Maggie's Centres aren't
injecting more architecture into small healthcare facilities than they
strictly need."
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