Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre

Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR

Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre

Sachin Agshikar

ARCHITECTS
HDR, Joao Laranjo, Sachin Agshikar

LEAD ARCHITECT
Sachin Agshika

LEAD ARCHITECTS
HDR

LOCAL ARCHITECT AND INTERIOR DESIGN
Joao Nuno Laranjo

ARCHITECT
Aniket Tarphe

PROJECT MANAGEMENT
PM7

LIGHTING CONSULTANTS
DPA

STRUCTURAL ENGINEERS
LNM

LANDSCAPE CONSULTANT
Sofia Raimundo

MEP CONSULTANTS
Vanderweil Engineers

AREA
34000 ft²

YEAR
2022

LOCATION
Lisbon, Portugal

CATEGORY
Hospital

In the year 2007, the Champalimaud Foundation took the initiative to build the Cancer Research Centre on a beautiful site in Lisbon along the River Tagus. It was designed by noted Indian architect Charles Correa.

Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR

By the time the Foundation decided to build a hospital for the cure of pancreatic cancer next to the Cancer Research Centre fourteen years later, Charles Correa had passed away.

They approached architect Sachin Agshikar from Mumbai, who had worked closely with Correa for eighteen years and served as his associate at the Research Centre.

Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR

Agshikar was hired to conceptualize the overall building design alongside the US-based firm HDR for the internal planning, and Joao Nuno Laranjo from Portugal as the local architect.

Compared to the 40,000 square meter plot on which the original research center was built, the new plot was extremely small, measuring merely 13,680 square meters.

Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR

The new hospital had to functionally relate to its predecessor because some of the facilities in the original one were to be shared. It seemed imperative to the architect that this new building be designed to blend seamlessly with the existing building mainly because they would be seen together as a single complex as one drove down the avenue.

It was also important to maintain a low scale as the hospital had a much longer façade facing the avenue compared to Correa’s research center. A floor higher would have made the new building overpowering.

Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR

Since the buildings in the Research Center were characterized by a visually-dominant curved façade, the front of the new hospital building also has a gently curved stone wall, 172 meters long.

The wall is punctured with oval-shaped cutouts on one side and a deep cut on the other side, partly revealing the pergola-shaded courtyards beyond.

The oval shape was a conscious echo of some of the most dramatic gestures from the Research Center to ensure architectural continuity. The driveway rising from the 0m level to the 3.5m lobby level is cleverly hidden behind a landscaped mound and a low wall.

Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR

One passes through the revolving doors to enter a largely glazed double-height space that is flooded with natural light, creating an extremely positive feeling for the patients who came here with a sense of hope.

The design also focuses on natural elements to generate a peaceful environment. Despite the privilege of being an oceanfront site, the view of the water was unfortunately blocked by the building on the adjacent property. Instead of trying to make the building taller to accord water views, the architect “decided to bring the ocean inside the building.”

Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR

The large waterbody within the courtyard with the rooms and corridors overlooking it was a conscious design device to this end.

The sight of still water and the sound of water cascading from a concealed spout in the wall have a soothing effect on patients sitting in the space. The water level matches with the floor level and gently disappears into a fine slot within the flooring.

Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR

The reception lobby, the waiting areas, the cafeteria, and the research labs are placed around these water bodies.

Considering Lisbon’s beautiful weather, the outdoor space next to the water creates a beautiful environment for the patients and their relatives to sit in. Similarly, the scientists can also step out of their labs intermittently and sit below a tree while taking a break.

Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR

The shifting shadows of the pergola cast on the curved stone-clad wall create visual interest throughout the day, and these courtyards are also visible from the patient rooms placed one floor above.

Escalators and lifts take one up to the second level overlooking the main lobby. The operation rooms on this floor are circular in shape with glass on one side.

Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR

Being in a hospital can be daunting, both physically and emotionally. A patient’s emotional state can play an important role in their recovery. And the emotional state of the relatives who accompany these patients can also not be underestimated.

This elegant building has given prime importance to these factors beyond fulfilling its functional requirements. Here, architecture will work together with medicine and research as agencies of hope and healing

Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
© Dan Schwalm © 2023 HDR


Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
Plan - Site
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
New Building Merging with Old


Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
Plan - Ground Floor
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
Plan - 1st Floor


Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
Section
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
Section
Botton Champalimaud Pancreatic Cancer Centre
Elevation