NBBJ Architects - Royal Liverpool University Hospital
Project Details
Project - Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen University Hospitals NHS Trust
Sector - Healthcare
Architect - nbbj architects
Installer/EOS client - Prater
Steel Framing System Supplier - EOS Facades
Materials/Type of System - Infill SFS
Project Overview
The new Royal Liverpool University Hospital is the centre for specialist, complex and emergency care. It is situated near a thriving city centre, in one of the fastest growing areas of Liverpool. Located next door to renowned universities, including the medical school and the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, the build enables the delivery of the Liverpool BioCampus and health park. Forming part of the multi-million-pound redevelopment of the hospital is the Clinical Services Support Building (CSSB). The five-storey CSSB accommodates storage facilities for medical supplies, laboratories and offices. It is also the hub for many of the vital services that will power the main hospital.
The CSSB is the first of three phases of the redevelopment. It encompasses the main structure as well as two link bridges, one spanning between the Acute and CSSB and the other linking to an existing multi-storey car park.
The CSSB has a total footprint of 60m x 40m, with steelwork erected around a regular 9.9m x 6.6m grid pattern. The ground floor also incorporates a double height service yard.
It was crucial that Trust requirements were to be followed when choosing which material to use. After an appraisal, steel was opted for the CSSB because of its speed and quality of construction. The largest steel element of phase one is the five-storey CSSB and its two link bridges, for which EOS supplied Elland Steel Structures more than 900t of structural steelwork.
EOS manufactured general infill with some tall spans for this build and worked closely with Hilti to perform pull-out testing on fixings on site.
A 100t capacity mobile crane was used to lift four 2m-deep girders, spanning 20m and each weighing 17t, that form the yard's open plan space. Two structural steel masonry lined cores provide the majority of the steelwork's stability, along with bracing. The main core was installed as part of the first steel erection phase, providing the steel erectors with sufficient temporary stability which all other areas of the structure could be erected from. Five phases, working to the full height of the building were needed to complete the structure.
The construction of the double height service yard involved the project's heaviest steel members - four 2m-deep girders, spanning 20m and each weighing 17t - requiring a variety of different mobile cranes. A series of 10m-high, 559mm diameter Circular Hollow Sections (CHS), with 25mm thick walls, support the girders. Once each CHS was installed, each member was filled with concrete to add to the overall robustness of the column supports.
For your chance to learn more about offsite in the healthcare sector, Explore Offsite Healthcare will be presenting a range of projects on 20 September in Birmingham, for more information or to book your place please visit www.exploreoffsite.co.uk.