The Daimiel CEDT solves a mixed healthcare program. The primary and emergency care rooms, being the areas with the highest flow of people, are placed on the ground floor following a scheme of parallel corridors. The top floor houses, using the same circulation scheme, specialty consultations, a residence area for health personnel and the surgical block.
Through its facades, the project tries to solve the image of a public-use building inserted in a housing square. A metal skin of micro-perforated galvanized sheet slats makes it lose the scale of the room and return a volume textured that manages to protect the interior of neighboring views while improving the thermal conditions of the building. On the inside, the building opens to 5 courtyards lined with corrugated sheet.
The profile of the building is slightly interwoven by incorporating the volumes of the installation boxes that align with the plane of the facade and the drains that produce the different accesses and the upper floor terrace. In the same way, the corners of the accesses fold in plan allowing the extension of the sidewalks as urban lobbies in the areas of greater traffic, blurring the perimeter of the building