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DESIGN


DANIELA PEDRINI – TECHNICAL DIRECTOR, THE BOLOGNA UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL SIMONA GANASSI AGGER – DIRECTOR, STUDIO OF PLANNING FOR THE HEALTHCARE AND EUROPEAN PROJECTS


Promoting the provision of person centred care


Developments in healthcare and related technologies and the increase in demand for health services have resulted in a continuous need for change. This led to the decision to demolish two old buildings to make space for a new building for cardio-thoraco- vascular care at Authority St Orsola – Malpighi Polyclinic.


The university polyclinic has been developed over time through progressive additions to the original building, which was built in 1592. The hospital complex is in the heart of an urban area, adjacent to the historic centre of Bologna. It includes the faculties of medicine and surgery of Bologna University, one of the oldest in Europe. It has 1535 hospital beds and 5153 employees; 70,000 patients are admitted and it provides more than three million outpatient services each year.1 Developments in healthcare and


related technologies and an increase in demand for health services have resulted in a continuous need for change. This led to the decision to demolish two old buildings to make space for a new building for the provision of cardio- thoraco-vascular care (CTV). The new complex includes: anaesthesiology and reanimation; angiology and coagulative diseases; cardiac surgery; paediatric cardiology and evolutive age diseases; paediatric and evolutive age cardiac surgery; cardiology; thoracic surgery; vascular surgery; internal


medicine; pulmonology and respiratory intensive care; and interventional pulmonology. The project started in


September 2009 with the demolition of the old buildings. Between 2010 and 2011, the work was delayed due to an archaeological discovery dating back to the fifth century BC. This is a common event in many parts of Italy. Following the official inauguration in


IFHE DIGEST 2019 area of about 36.760 m2


The new building covers an and


A map of the university polyclinic.


December 2015, the first seven units were transferred in the first part of 2016, while interventional pulmonology was transferred at the beginning of 2017. Every year, the department undertakes


more than 20 heart and lung transplants, almost 1300 cardiac procedures (270 paediatric), nearly 1200 vascular procedures, about 300 thoracic procedures, about 1700 hemodynamic procedures (460 paediatric) and about 50 valve system implants of various types.


has 45 nurse posts. It includes: 135 hospital beds; 49 beds in intensive and sub-intensive areas; a surgery area with six traditional surgical rooms and two hybrid rooms; three rooms for hemodynamics and electrophysiology; an area for instrumental diagnostics, equipped with one biplane angiograph and two traditional angiographs; four Rx scanners;


one CAT scanner; one MRI scanner; ultrasound rooms; and 15 doctor’s offices (nine of them paediatric). The new building has eight floors – one of which is entirely and another partially underground – and is composed of three buildings, which make up the three sides of a triangle. One side is mainly dedicated to support and service activities, while the other two are organised across multiple levels, hosting patient rooms and other health-related activities. At the centre of


Daniela Pedrini


Daniela Pedrini, an engineer, has had a long career in health, during which she has held roles including director of the technical, planning, development and investments department at The Bologna University Hospital. She directed a multimillion euro PFI contract for the total renovation of the hospital’s energy production. She is project manager for renovations and new hospital construction, co-founder and president of the Italian Association of Architects and Engineers for Healthcare (SIAIS) and president of IFHE-EU. She has also been awarded the Italian Republic Order of Merit.


Simona Ganassi Agger


Simona Ganassi Agger is an architect-urban planner. She has taught at Italian and American universities and has worked at the Oakridge National Laboratory on Renewable Energy in the US. As part of the Italian MoH Evaluation of Investments


Team, she worked on regional health infrastructure financing programmes. She has participated in EU financed projects: Renewable Energy for Hospitals (RES-Hospitals) and Public Procurement of Innovation (EcoQUIP). She conceived and directed the


study ‘Sustainable and Climate Change Resilient Healthcare Facilities in Europe: the challenge’ (2018), supported by IFHE-EU. The author of a book on urbanism, she


writes articles and gives presentations at conferences, congresses and workshops and is chair of the board of the European Health Property Network and a council member for SIAIS and IFHE.


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