The original building of Pennsylvania Hospital, the nation's first hospital.
The text on the cornerstone of Pennsylvania Hospital, the nation's first hospital, can still be viewed under its plexiglass cover. "This building," Benjamin Franklin wrote in the inscription, "was piously founded for the relief of the sick and miserable."
The hospital was created in 1751 by progressives, and yet many of its design elements would seem primitive to us now. On the ground floor "were the cells for lunatics," with a long hallway "for such patients as could be trusted to walk about," an 1897 history of the Philadelphia landmark noted. The state-of-the-art building also included open fireplaces and "ventilators to carry off the foul air."
But while some of the building's most forward-thinking features seem backwards today, American hospitals of the future may take at least one important cue from their earliest predecessor, which was seen not just as a place for the sick but as a crown jewel of a quickly growing city.
Pennsylvania Hospital's opening ceremonies were such a big event that the city's schools were dismissed so that children could be in attendance for the historic occasion. While it's difficult to imagine a hospital opening today creating enough excitement for a citywide holiday, we may again be moving beyond thinking of such critical institutions only when we fall ill — or at least hospital architects see some hopeful signs.
In Sickness And In Health
In the future, "hospitals can and should become more of a centerpiece of the community," said Charles Griffin, president of AIA's Academy of Architecture for Health, in an interview. "They're transitioning from a place for sickness to a place where you can learn about health."
This focus on wellness and preventative care is a driving principle of the Affordable Care Act and a healthcare trend in general, so it's no surprise that it's being reflected in the designs of hospitals themselves. While no amount of preventative care will remove the need for emergency rooms, trauma centers, and intensive care, the hope is that hospitals might expand their services that help keep people out of their sickest wards.
A growing body of research has suggested that better-designed hospitals — with private rooms, plenty of windows, natural light, and noise control — are actually associated with shorter stays and better outcomes for patients. And beginning in the 1990s, hospitals began going even further, adding demonstration kitchens, for example, to teach patients how to cook healthy meals when they leave.