Cuningham Group Architecture unveils Southern California Advanced Care Center

Southern California Advanced Care Center

The medical facility recently opened in Torrance, California – on the site of the former Daily Breeze newspaper facility – with the City of Hope Cancer Center. Additional tenants will join the facility in 2019, all exhibiting advanced approaches to patient-centric care.

Photo Courtesy of Cuningham Group Architecture

Owned by Providence Health Services, the three-story, 106,000-square-foot (not including parking) Care Center will house a Women’s Center, Imaging Center, Ambulatory Surgery Center, Clinics, Medical and Surgical Oncology, Infusion Center and 2 Linear Accelerators.

Photo Courtesy of Cuningham Group Architecture

Cuningham Group is the executive architect and designer of tenant improvements, including all the interior medical facilities. CallisonRTKL is architect of record for the exterior core shell. The state-of-the-art facilities emphasize the latest understandings of healthful design, said Project Architect Julian Barajas.

Photo Courtesy of Cuningham Group Architecture

Design Highlights
Patient Centric: Core common areas and entries are created for the public or patients. Staff will arrive though other entries. Concierge Service: Rather than a traditional registration desk, the center offers a concierge desk – as in a hotel – with a person at a table or where guests can register on a kiosk. The front areas include a coffee shop. Living Room Seating: Waiting areas are broken up into separate clusters.

Photo Courtesy of Cuningham Group Architecture

This creates a home-like, living-room feeling. Even the more clinical spaces emphasize warm, natural materials, with spaces that feel less like a hospital and more like hospitality design. Spa-Like: The Women’s Center component offers a resort-style approach, with a softer ambience and warm materials to diffuse the stress sometimes associated with mammograms and other treatments.

Photo Courtesy of Cuningham Group Architecture

Organic patterned screens in the waiting room hearken to biophilic design. Symbolic images of nature to help to reduce stress. Purple accent walls provide an updated spa feel, and the fireplace is a nice touch to help ground a person. This more home-like design – not harsh or sterile – extends to the entire complex. Providence Breeze Advanced Care Center was built on the former site of Daily. Source and photos Courtesy of Cuningham Group Architecture.

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