Health, Hygiene, and Comfort Issues in Architecture and Building Materials
Health and hygiene friendly construction materials do not pertain only to hospitals or healthcare centers, but the issue of health […]
Health and hygiene friendly construction materials do not pertain only to hospitals or healthcare centers, but the issue of health […]
‘Skin’ or ‘Shell’ are often associated with superficiality or shallowness. Expressions that illustrate this point include, skin-deep knowledge or an […]
Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, Ramathibodi Hospital, Mahidol University Interview เมื่อเดือน พฤษภาคมที่ผ่านมานี้ คณะแพทยศาสตร์รามาธิบดีฯ ใช้วิธีการประกวดแบบอาคาร สำหรับโรงพยาบาลแห่งใหม่ที่จะเกิดขึ้นในอนาคตอันใกล้ คือ โรงพยาบาลรามาธิบดีศรีอยุธยา นับเป็นครั้งแรกตั้งแต่ก่อตั้งคณะฯ มา 55 […]
With no end in sight when it comes to our battle with future novel diseases, it is the right time for us to review how humans’ endeavors to cope with COVID-19 have shaped the state of New Normal and its influences on the way one lives, including some of the possible dimensions in the way we think about and design architecture and cities.
Modern Architecture has been a subject of interest in Thailand for more than 70 years. The modern way of life, advances in technology, society, and growing economy have influenced the architectural practices inspired largely by foreign architects as well as a divergence in the use of natural materials in construction to reinforced concrete. Due to these factors the role of architectural design during this period is a symbol of these advance.
In her latest book, Radical Architecture of the Future, curator and architecture critic Beatrice Galilee, questions the role of future architecture, possibilities of new design applications beyond current imagination and the most radical take we could accept.
For the first time since the Serpentine Gallery began its operations, the Serpentine Pavilion Initiative that the commission has extended to the other areas of the city outside the Kensington Gardens. Another first to be celebrated is that the pavilion was designed by the youngest female architect Sumayya Vally who leads the Johannesburg practice- Counterspace
Situated in a dense community in Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital’s area, this new nurse dormitory was designed by Plan Architect with the aim to decrease the usage of air-conditioning and create all physical comforts and promote well-being for its users.
The Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital, Mahidol University in collaboration with the Association of Siamese Architects under Royal Patronage organized a design competition for “Ramathibodisriayuthya Medical Center”
“We really believe that architecture is an art. It is made of precision, delicacy and kindness. So, in a way, making a project could be like making a poem. When you make a poem, you try to find a few words but only these ones can make this sentence or this text so beautiful”