Clinical Care, Industrial Setting
Last fall we wrote about the architecture firm Anshen + Allen’s Green Patient Lab, a traveling mock-up of a hospital room stocked with the latest and best in sustainable health-care technology and design. Today the firm let us know that it has also begun working with Containers to Clinics (C2C), a Dover, Massachusetts-based nonprofit that’s developing a prototype portable health clinic constructed from industrial shipping containers. C2C was founded in 2008 by a Boston-area physician’s assistant named Elizabeth Sheehan; it aims to deliver routine preventive care to underserved areas of the developing world. (Right now, it’s working to deploy its first prototype in Haiti.) Sheehan estimates that one C2C unit will cost approximately $100,000, but that figure includes transport, equipment, medications, and salaries for seven local staff members. You can watch the retrofit process in the video above; read more at containerstoclinics.org.
After the jump, Anshen + Allen’s renderings of the prototype clinic provide a better idea of the distribution of medical facilities within the 8-by-20-foot steel containers.









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This is great- I too have been pondering the same idea as a senior architect specializing in healthcare and glad to see it is gaining traction. Emergency temporary housing should be done the same way for these communities faced with the various unexpected tragedies. The steel shipping container is not only already designed for expedited transport with infrastructure already in place at the ports to move them but is all but immune to earthquake forces as well as high hurricane winds (with tied downs of course). Great work to your team and for bringing back the notion of contributing one’s skills to improve the built environment on a realistic scale in lieu of designing for ego and profits.
Comment by Belinda Currin, AIA, LEED AP — March 26, 2010, @ 9:11 am