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Emily Thurlow
Diploma 16

City Sanitas

The thesis explores the role of public space in the privatised world of the global city, using the US 2014 health care reform bill as a catalyst to create a new public urban typology.

Located in New York, City Sanitas proposes an alternative type of immediate health care, bridging the existing system through the creation of separate primary source centres for the newly insured. Using opportunities of the primarily undeveloped coastline, a new public “belt” will be developed,  which over time will grow to form a new coastal landscape, linking the city back to its waterfront . The result proposes to become an urban prototype to occupy a network of these edge conditions that currently exist around the city: New York’s future public health network.

Spatially, the project explores rotation as a means to create new ground over the infrastructure, multiplying the number of connections allowing it to become part of the cityscape . Unlike the static solid masses engulfed by the high-rise blocks, the rotated ground becomes key in creating a flexible programme between public and private space, allowing for flexible occupation, where the facilities are able to expand over time according to societies needs. The result intends to reactivate the edge condition, becoming an exciting public space, opening the city back up to its coastline.

                  

 

The global city is a place of high convenience and high consumption. The result is high levels of air pollution which ultimately lead to poor health and respiratory conditions for those who live there.
Can public space become an opportunity to ensure not only public health but also the city's health?
Emergency medical care in the US is on the verge of collapse. With the 2014 Health Care Reform Bill more Americans will be visiting their emergency room than ever before. 
City Sanitas proposes an alternative type of immediate health care, bridging the existing system through the creation of separate primary source centres for the newly insured. 
New York's coastline has become the city's biggest wasted space, becoming subject to crime and vandalism. A method is needed to not only plug into the infrastructure, but also provide links to bridge the coastline – reconnecting the people back to the water.
From constructing the prototype two clear parameters were defined: interior rotation (per layer) and exterior rotation (between layers). The exterior rotation controls the span and cantilever while the interior controls the spatial quality. As a result the structure is able to adapt to the site conditions, and able to span over a range of differing projections.



The current trend of creating space for the large institutional hospitals is by extrusion, creating deep floor plates and inward-looking plans. However when building on the edge condition, rotation is used as a strategy to allow space to be created over the infrastructure from small footprints. A recreational landscape is initiated creating vital links whilst reactivating the edge condition.
networkSoon the Sanitas will become the place to go, a network of free health care filling the gap spaces in the city.