Lesson 1: turning a strong address into a unique property
The properties in question are often of exceptional significance, and refurbishment projects have to be able to transform an emblematic site with strong emotional associations (birth, sickness, death) for the public into a new urban destination.
Hospital sites are singular in many respects. No other type of building packs so much complexity into one place, with a multiplicity of factors - technical (utilities, pollution, diversity of building types etc.), political (heritage, public service, health), land occupancy models (temporary occupancy, or soft frontiers between public domain and hospital property), organizational (governance, organization and coordination of internal and external services) - in play.
Hospitals are highly urban in character, too: hybrids which accommodate both the public and private spheres. Public, because they’re facilities of primary importance, as their size and visibility attest. But private too, because they’re never totally permeable to the public realm: they general operate access control systems, and are places where tranquillity and discretion reign; and they often resemble labyrinths to those who don’t work there every day.
So whatever kind of building we’re talking about - an imposing city-centre infirmary or a more modern, less remarkable building (although for certain architecture lovers that “less remarkable” is open to dispute) - converting an old hospital into something else is no easy matter. And the development programme has to reflect the complexity of the transformation and the history the site encapsulates.
The sites in question often occupy several thousand square metres - the size of a whole new neighbourhood. Dynamic urban contexts should be able to absorb developments of these dimensions. Therefore, if it’s to convince and motivate the developers, the refurbishment programme and the investment model must also be exceptional to offset the difficulty (and costs) of the transformation.
Various strategies have been deployed in this direction, with varying degrees of success. How important is “exceptional”? How do we “fill” the site without creating new frontiers around the new neighbourhood, but at the same time without turning it into a free-for-all? It can be difficult to find the right balance. In Lyon, the former Debrousse hospital was converted into a luxury residential complex, turning the existing architecture and landscaping to maximum account; the development also includes a number of social housing units.
As a new address, the Debrousse complex retains some of its “hospital” associations in the form of social inclusiveness. The Debrousse model is increasingly emulated by hospitals, faced with the increasing scarcity of dedicated healthcare infrastructure and underfunding by the public authorities. Some hospitals choose to redevelop around training, inclusive internment (intergenerational residences, residences for independent seniors), socially-oriented medicine (placement of liberal professionals, recuperation and reintegration centres, hospices for the elderly etc.), the health-related economy (start-up villages, enterprise incubators, tertiary technology such as laboratory services, R&D etc.). Generally speaking, all reflect a concern with integrating the site in the urban fabric in a manner that respects the environment.