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Mott Children's Center
Puyallup, Wash.
Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Partnership
A setting for children with neuromuscular
disorders and developmental disabilities
© Eckert & Eckert
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For more photos click on 'photos
& drawings' above.
To see the people and products
behind this project click on 'people & products.'
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By Sheri Olson, AIA
Noahs Ark, a rich metaphor for
Good Samaritan Hospitals Childrens Therapy Unit
and Child Development Center in Puyallup, Washington, suggests
safe passage through difficult challenges. The architects
sidestepped obvious kitsch to create a distinctive, noninstitutional
setting for children with birth defects, neuromuscular disorders,
and/or developmental disabilities, many of whom may visit
the facility several times a week for years.
Like an ark, the bowed wood facade of
the 42,000-square-foot childrens center floats in a
3-acre meadow on the edge of the hospital campus. Winding
paths of crushed rock, smooth pebbles, and wood chips provide
intentional challenges for children as they move from the
parking lot to the entry. "The landscape and building
are partners in therapy," says director Linda Yates.
Horizontal cedar siding wraps the curved
120-foot-long front wallan unusual choice for a medical
building but vital in establishing the centers noninstitutional
ambience. A series of portholes and a short bridge across
a shallow moat to the front door evoke a nautical theme.
A two-story-tall lobby allows a glimpse
of activities on the second floor and provides a generous
waiting space for siblings who often accompany patients. From
here, animal tracks sandblasted in the stained-concrete floor
help kids navigate the building.
Just beyond the reception desk, a kelp
forest rendered in fused glass enlivens the windows of the
adjacent two-story-tall cylindrical hydrotherapy room, the
centerpiece of the facility and the backbone of its circulation.
Along the curved ramp and stairs that wrap the drum, 40 portholes
bubble across the surface at child height for views inside
of the nautilus-shaped pool. Within, a 9-foot band of gentle
waves and giant seashells in glass-tile mosaic circles the
room.
The large treatment room on the main
floor contains the strongest ark imagery. Here, curved Glu-Lam
beams and columns mimic the timbers of a wooden boats
hull, creating a vaulted, light-filled space. A canted glass
window wall that starts at floor level balances the projects
sense of refuge and prospect and allows children working on
mats or low benches to have sweeping views of Puyallup Valley
to the south.
Read more about this project in our
Business
Week/Architectural Record Awards section. See the July
2002 issue of Architectural Record for full coverage
of this project.
Formal name
of Project:
Dr. Donald & Beret Mott Children's Center
Location:
Puyallup, Wash.
Gross square
footage:
42,000 sq. ft.
Total construction
cost:
$8.6 million
Owner:
Good Samaritan Hospital
Architect:
Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Partnership
1911 2nd Avenue
Suite 800
Seattle, Washington 98101
206.623.9414 phone
206.623.7868 fax
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