Maggie’s Centres: A Blueprint for Cancer Care
John Hill
4. 8月 2014
Maggie’s Dundee, 2003; Architect: Frank Gehry, Gehry Partners, LLP; Landscape Design: Arabella Lennox-Boyd; Photo: © Maggie’s Centres
The exhibition on buildings designed by Frank Gehry, Rem Koolhaas, Richard Rogers and others opens on September 13, 2014, at the Carnegie Museum of Art's Heinz Architectural Center.
Although the Maggie's Centres are known by architects for being designed by the likes of these famous names, their success stems from what the CMOA describes as "focused concern for vanguard design in union with empathy and the empowerment of patients." Founded by Maggie Keswick Jencks (1941–1995), while she was being treated for cancer in Edinburgh, and her husband, well-known architectural writer Charles Jencks, 16 Maggie's Centres have been built in the UK, with 6 more in development. The small, bespoke buildings are the antithesis of large medical facilities that are prevalent in the UK and elsewhere. Further, each building has a strong landscape component, a clear extension of the interests and beliefs of both Charles, a landscape designer, and Maggie, who wrote a book on Chinese gardens.
Maggie’s Centres: A Blueprint for Cancer Care presents 5 of the 16 completed buildings through models, photographs, original drawings, and videos. The exhibition is organized by the New York School of Interior Design, and curated for CMOA by Raymund Ryan, curator of architecture.