flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Glass provides patients with clear, scenic views to create a healing, relaxing environment

Sponsored Content Glass and Glazing

Glass provides patients with clear, scenic views to create a healing, relaxing environment


By Vitro Architectural Glass | June 9, 2020
Vitro UCSD Jacobs Medical Center

At UCSD Jacobs Medical Center, a point-fixed structural glass façade—fabricated with Solarban® 70 glass on Starphire Ultra-Clear® glass by Vitro Glass—reinforces patient-centered care.

Patient-first care is alive and well at Jacobs Medical Center, a 509,000-square-foot, 245-bed medical and surgical specialty hospital that innovatively fuses together modern technology, forward-thinking design and a healing environment. The University of California San Diego (UCSD) Health System’s Jacobs Medical Center is distinguished by a gleaming, point-fixed structural glass façade—fabricated with Solarban® 70 glass (formerly Solarban® 70XL) on Starphire Ultra-Clear® glass by Vitro Architectural Glass—and a striking curvilinear form that reinforces patient-centered care prominently throughout its 10 stories. The freeform style of the building minimizes conventional right-angle corners and maximizes daylighting simultaneously, creating a natural flow and providing easier navigation for patient beds. 

CannonDesign specified abundant use of transparent solar control low-e glass to give patients clear, scenic views of the surrounding hills and ocean. These soothing vistas, combined with plenty of natural daylight and glare and noise control, help create a healing, relaxing atmosphere. Although it met all performance requirements, the glass specification had to be adjusted to achieve another design objective, which required close collaboration between Vitro Glass and Northwestern Industries, Inc. (NWI), a Vitro Certified fabricator. 

“Part of what makes this project so unique is the whitish exterior look the architect wanted the building to have,” explained Frank Forgione of NWI. “We worked with Vitro’s technical team testing various glass samples and mock-ups that could meet this requirement and still maintain the desired performance. Ultimately, we put a customized silk-screened white frit on Starphire Ultra-Clear® glass, which we then laminated on Solarban® 70 glass.”

This configuration was used extensively, including the 11-foot, 8-inch floor-to-ceiling windows in all patient rooms; the front-glazed, unitized curtain wall system; and spandrel shadow-box glazing. In all, more than 100,000 square-feet of glass was installed. To handle this volume and facilitate timely shipment of glass orders to ENCLOS, the glazing contractor, NWI used the Vitro Concierge Program, which provides logistics management and customized coordination for projects of this size. By providing priority access to the glass, the Vitro Concierge Program helped to ensure the project stayed on schedule. 

Formulated with the industry’s most advanced triple-silver coating engineered for use on Starphire Ultra-Clear® glass, Solarban® 70 glass has visible light transmittance (VLT) of 64 percent with a solar heat gain coefficient (SHGC) of 0.27 and a light-to-solar gain (LSG) ratio of 1.85. This high performance, combined with the silk-screened white frit on Starphire® glass, helped the architectural firm achieve its design objectives and enabled the facility to earn LEED® (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification at the Silver level. 

To learn more about Solarban® 70 glass or Starphire® glass by Vitro Architectural Glass, visit www.vitroglazings.com.

Related Stories

Sponsored | Glass and Glazing | Mar 20, 2018

'A sense of place': Connectivity and healing at ProMedica Health and Wellness Center

With 23 interconnected standard clinic modules, the center is designed for ease of movement for patients, staff and supplies.

Glass and Glazing | Mar 5, 2018

New $5 Billion Apple Headquarters Has a Glass Problem

The substantial use of glass on the interior of Apple Park has caused headaches for some employees, literally.

Sponsored | Glass and Glazing | Feb 1, 2018

Subtle or striking, always flexible

Interior design possibilities with the latest interior glass products

Sponsored | Glass and Glazing | Nov 21, 2017

Back-painted glass: Luxury effects made easy

Products that give an elevated energy to their environment are important for builders and designers to consider.

Glass and Glazing | Nov 20, 2017

Smart glass maximizes comfort at Bowie State University

By blocking sunlight on hot days, the electrochromic glass will help reduce energy demand in the building.

University Buildings | Nov 6, 2017

A reconstructed building sets the standard for future rehabs at Cornell

Early AE collaboration played a major role in moving this project forward efficiently. 

Glass and Glazing | Oct 13, 2017

Toronto’s CN Tower improves views with floor-to-ceiling dynamic glass windows

The glass darkens in proportion to the sun’s intensity to produce a reduction of heat and glare inside the building.

Glass and Glazing | Oct 12, 2017

Glass installation depicts Chicago landscape at O’Hare Terminal 5 expansion

The art was inspired by NASA satellite imagery.

| Oct 10, 2017

This is SageGlass

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category



Glass and Glazing

The next generation of thermal glazing: How improving U-value can yield energy savings and reduce carbon emissions

The standards for energy-efficient construction and design have been raised. Due to the development of advanced low-e coatings for the interior surface and vacuum insulating technologies, architects now have more choices to improve U-values wherever enhanced thermal performance is needed to create eco-friendly spaces. These options can double or even triple thermal performance, resulting in annual energy savings and a positive return on carbon.


Curtain Wall

7 steps to investigating curtain wall leaks

It is common for significant curtain wall leakage to involve multiple variables. Therefore, a comprehensive multi-faceted investigation is required to determine the origin of leakage, according to building enclosure consultants Richard Aeck and John A. Rudisill with Rimkus. 

halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021