Opinion

Building wellbeing: how can we build to meet people’s needs?

Maggie’s cancer centre in Leeds (Image: Sir Robert McAlpine)
Maggie’s cancer centres prioritise the end user in their construction. It’s a lesson the rest of the construction sector can learn from, say Paul Hamer and Dame Laura Lee.

When Maggie Keswick Jencks was told her breast cancer had returned on a visit to Western General Hospital in Edinburgh in 1993, she and her husband were moved to a windowless corridor to process the news. It was this experience, at an already challenging time, that led Maggie and her husband Charles to found the first Maggie’s in Edinburgh in 1996.

Unique design

All Maggie’s centres, which sit alongside NHS cancer hospitals nationwide, are uniquely designed by a world-class architect to offer a home away from home for cancer patients. There, they can comfortably and confidently receive free practical and emotional support from expert staff. The centres are nothing like a hospital, rejecting clinical designs and atmosphere to instead offer calming spaces built around principles of wellbeing.

They are a source of escapism and strength to those who use them. The ambition is clear, but just how can such principles and ambitions be embedded in a build?

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