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This is the first building resulting from the successful inclusion of our practice with partners RPP architects of Belfast onto the Northern Ireland NHS (PCCI) framework. Together we have been designated as the architects for the Belfast HSC Trust and this is our first project in that framework(PCCI). The building is a mental health facility which brings together three functions never before co-located. These firstly are a consulting facility where out patients have appointments to see psychiatric consultants very much in the manner of seeing a GP. Secondly is a day centre where patients are encouraged to attend for a whole or half day and to engage in various forms of therapy. And finally is an eight bedroom short-stay residential section, designed to be an alternative to residence within an acute hospital where patients might go for a night or maybe up to two weeks respite. The site is located on the Antrim Road, North Belfast where the Trust currently manages an out-patients and residential hotel accommodation facility there is currently a 1960's nurses' home. This building will be demolished in its entirety. The site is fortunate in being surrounded by mature trees. The plan shows a U shaped design around a private patient orientated courtyard garden. Entrance is in the centre, one wing is for consulting for outpatients the other for day patients. Consultants' rooms are clustered around small walled gardens with all the circulation and waiting areas open to the main garden. The residential section has its own entrance and presence on the site, akin to a gatehouse. It is designed as much as possible to be an ordinary two storey house but with a double height living area around which all the main spaces gravitate. A service section connects the main building to the residential section but there is deliberately no internal patient access between the two parts of the building. Office accommodation for outreach staff on the first floor of the main building completes the design. The building has now been lodged for planning permission and we hope that construction will begin in early 2010. Credits
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