Archives

Ersta Hospital

Holistic care
Ersta hospital
Architecture, Interior Design, Landscape
Health, Parks, Play & Public Spaces
Client: Ersta Diakoni
Location: Södermalm, Stockholm
Assignment years: 2017 - 2023
Gross area: Approx. 24,000 m²
Partners: Emma Olbergs Design

Together with Ersta Diakoni, Tengbom is developing Ersta Hospital on Södermalm in central Stockholm. With an evidence-based approach and in close partnership with healthcare providers, the organization, patients and family members, we are creating an industry-leading healthcare environment where people will feel (almost) completely at home.

Ersta hospital

Ersta Hospital opened on the heights of Södermalm in 1864. In 1907, Axel Kumlien designed a new building for the hospital, which relocated nearby. Fifty years later, Tengbom designed major additions and extensions to the block. In 2014, an architectural design competition launched for Ersta Nya Sjukhus—the new Ersta hospital. The goal was to create a design that honored the historic identity of both the surroundings and the hospital’s key areas of expertise. Nyréns Arkitektkontorwon the competition and, together with RATIO, developed a concept that elegantly followed the topography and reflected the area’s scale and classical aesthetic. They led the project until the building permit application phase.

Ersta hospital

Winner of Best Healthcare category in Monocle Design Awards 2024

In 2017, Tengbom was tasked with managing and carrying out the project – and developing the function and design of the new hospital. Work was conducted in close partnership with the Ersta Diakoni Program Office, and in light of the modified and granted building permit, with the City of Stockholm and its architecture office.

Connection to the city

The new hospital rises some six stories up the hill from one of the island’s busiest streets, Folkungagatan. At eight stories, the building’s highest section runs from east to west along the crest of the hill, in harmony with the characteristic buildings nearby. Two projecting buildings – one facing south toward Folkungagatan and one facing the old hospital building to the north – form two lush courtyards.

Even inside the new hospital, the connection to the city is the primary theme. From the wards and rooms to the hallways and large rooftop terraces, the surrounding city and vegetation have a constant presence. The city landscape is part of the healing environment. The glassed-in hospital lobby is a large, bright and welcoming room rising up three stories, with views of the surroundings.

Ersta hospital

Architecture, exterior character and facades of the hospital

The interior and exterior of the new Ersta hospital create a sense of cohesion. Patients and visitors should feel welcome, safe and well cared for. In a classic interplay of large windows and horizontal and vertical features, the facades are made of metal and ocher brown anodized aluminum in a carefully chosen hue.

Ersta hospital

The materials change in character and reflect light, while the colors complement the yellow and brown plaster facades of the surroundings. Windows match the facade color, creating a sturdy and uniform expression that enhances the urban quality. A grayish-red flamed granite foundation reinforces the building’s cohesive design.

Tengbom’s starting point is to create healthcare environments in which patients are the focus, and where the architecture supports medical development and new working methods.

Somewhere between a hospital and a home

If you imagine a scale ranging from the public, often impersonal spaces of large hospitals, to a private, home-like setting, the aim is for the new Ersta hospital to be a balance between both worlds. It should be infused with personality and a sense of care-giving, paired with professionalism and trust.

Ersta hospitalInterior

The new Ersta hospital is characterized by calm, quality, and genuine natural materials like wood and stone. The details are thoughtful and the colors are classic, light and earthy. The color and material concept was developed with inspiration from Ersta’s visual legacy in an exciting collaboration with Emma Olbers Design.

Ersta hospital

The bright, glassed-in lobby runs through the building like an axis. A spacious open staircase defines the backdrop, creating a welcoming focal point with a sense of space and clarity. Patients, visitors, and staff share the hospital lobby and the adjacent elevator hall, reinforcing an open and inclusive atmosphere.

Ersta hospital

Ersta hospitalOutdoor environments

Designing the hospice ward required extra care. Patients and their families should feel at ease and spend quality time together. A private, green rooftop terrace offers a peaceful retreat. A swing by the elevators and a playroom for children add warmth and comfort to the environment.

In front of the main entrance at Folkungagatan, the courtyards and rooftop terraces are significant in terms of design. A fundamental part of our task is to make it possible to see nature from multiple stories in the building.

Ersta hospitalUnique operational development with long-term solutions

The new Ersta Hospital delivers resource efficiency, flexibility, a good working environment, and a strong focus on patient safety. The floorplan improves efficiency by using just one elevator hall with short corridors. Stacking hospital units keeps related functions close. The busiest departments, with the shortest visitation times, sit nearest to the entrance. In-ward recovery plays a central role in the hospital’s care concept. Patient rooms prioritise proximity to windows. The layout places the patient and family area by the window and the care provider area by the corridor. Staff conceal medical equipment and materials or integrate them into the surroundings. This creates a calmer and more patient-friendly atmosphere.

Ersta hospital

With Ersta Nya Sjukhus, the new Ersta hospital, the team at Tengbom aims to contribute to world-class medical care. The building extends the hospital’s long history and strengthens its presence in the city. It will play a key role in Stockholm’s continued growth.

Awards and nominations for Ersta Hospital

Winner of Stockholm Building of the Year 2024. Winner of the Monocle Design Awards in the Best Healthcare category 2024.

Contact person

Anna Morén

Studio Manager Health and Life Science
+46 841 03 54 47

Malmö Service Building

Seamless logistics at a high level
Architecture, Landscape
Health, Life Science, Parks, Play & Public Spaces
Client: Region Skåne
Location: Malmö Hospital Area
Years of commission: 2016-2021
Contractor: Regionfastigheter
Project type: Service building
Awards and Recognitions: Nominated for Steel Building Prize

The new service building at Malmö Hospital Campus blends efficiency with architectural integrity and aesthetic clarity. A pivotal facility for both patients and staff—framed by generous green spaces.

Photo: Mads Frederik

A logistical powerhouse behind the scenes

At a modern hospital, operations must run smoothly—if not seamlessly. An efficient service infrastructure is essential. Inside the new service building in Malmö, four hundred staff members ensure that goods and services reach every corner of the hospital. According to lead architect Magnus Nilsson, it’s something of a “logistical marvel”, supplying hospital departments with everything from medications and lab results to freshly prepared meals. The building also manages laundry, waste, and returns, all flowing through an extended underground culvert system.

“This building is here to support healthcare,” explains Helena Beckman, healthcare specialist at Tengbom. “It’s designed to make staff’s work easier—so they can focus on delivering safer, more efficient and more sustainable care. Our hope is that this building contributes to better care for patients and that staff feel proud of their working environment.”

Deliveries are handled by compact autonomous robots pulling single trolleys or even small trains to and from the hospital units.

Photo: Mads Frederik

A glass house powered by robots

Dark corridors and hidden back-of-house zones? Not here. Deliveries are instead transported via small robots that travel by lift directly to the wards.

“The region’s ambition is clear,” says Helena. “Doctors and nurses should be able to devote as much time as possible to their patients.”

Photo: Mads Frederik
Photo: Mads Frederik

Here, the service process doesn’t hide behind closed doors. Quite the opposite. Through stacked glass volumes, the building proudly allows a degree of visibility into its inner workings. According to architect Patrik Ekenhill, that might come as a surprise.

“When you hear the term ‘service building’, glass isn’t the first thing that comes to mind. But we see it as a sustainable material—and one that lets us put the operations on display.”

Photo: Mads Frederik

“You’ll see the trolleys gliding to and from the culvert system,” adds Magnus. “Even the art installations reinforce the experience from the outside.”

A great deal of work has gone into making the building and its surroundings inviting—not only for staff and patients but also for the public.

A new civic landmark

One of the project’s key challenges was integrating the service building with the city. Located at the edge of the hospital campus, the site faces residential buildings just across the street. Socially, it’s vital that the hospital feels open and accessible to the public. Together with an older building and the new mortuary, a public square has been created in front of the building.

“I can picture it becoming a kind of attraction—where people pause to watch the little robots on the move,” says Helena.

Paths from the surrounding city lead towards the square and further into the hospital campus. This area has been designed as a calm, semi-wild environment, where visitors walk on boardwalk-style paths between rain gardens and planted zones. The square forms part of a wider area once home to the early 20th-century epidemic hospital. Here, old and new architecture come together. The existing parkland is interwoven with newly designed outdoor spaces, which offer hospital staff moments of rest and relaxation.

A complete approach to a complex system

Designing outdoor environments in a hospital context is no small feat. The site is governed by a detailed programme and a network of systems, logistics and technologies. As landscape architects, our task was to make the whole system work—while ensuring that the space remains welcoming and safe for visitors and passers-by.

The service building itself is a large and complex undertaking—one that demanded close collaboration between architects from multiple disciplines: building, landscape, interior and urban planning. Both Magnus and Helena agree: this kind of teamwork just feels right.

Photo: Mads Frederik

Awards and recognition

In 2023, the Malmö Hospital Service Building was nominated for the Swedish Steel Construction Prize (Stålbyggnadspriset).

Contact person

Josefin Klein

Practice Director Skåne
+46 40 641 31 18

Kotten

Classic cabin in a modern version
Kotten 2015
Architecture, Landscape
Health, Parks, Play & Public Spaces, Sports, Sports & Health
Client: Kungälv Kommun
Years of commission: 2013-2015
Location: Kungälv
Contractor: Kungälvs kommun / Ängegärde Bygg
Collaborative partners: CMC Byggkonsult, Norconsult, Andersson och Hultmark, SLN Elkonsult, Fast Engineering Göteborg
Competences: Culture & Sport, Interior Design, Landscape, BIM & 3D illustration, Hotel & Restaurant, Accessibility

From the first sketch to the opening. That is how involved newly qualified Christofer Ödmark got to be in the project Kotte, a sports center in the woods – a competition that landed on his desk during his internship at Tengbom´s in Gothenburg.

Kotten – the Pine Cone – is in our humble opinion a real gem of a story. Not only that actually, because the mere sight of the structure in the clearing in the nature reserve Fontin is enough to give you goose bumps. The project is a happy story in many ways both because it was the winning entry from a young and promising talent in our office called Christofer Ödmark, and also because the project has become a viral success internationally and received enormous attention. Again, in our humble opinion.

Kotten Tengbom 2015
Photo: Ulf Celander

The story began in 2013 when Christofer Ödmark, fresh from his studies at Chalmers, started an internship at Tengbom’s Gothenburg office. One day, a competition landed on his desk—to design a new sports center in Kungälv after the old one was tragically lost in a fire. With guidance from his mentor, Hans Lindgren, he developed a complete proposal. The result was an oval building made entirely from organic materials. Its wooden modules, arranged in a pattern reminiscent of a pine cone, and its sedum-covered roof caught the jury and Kungälv’s council by surprise. They had hoped for something out of the ordinary—and that’s exactly what they got. The rest, as they say, is history.

Illustration: Tengbom
Illustration: Tengbom

”I worked on Kotten from the very first sketch to the opening of the finished building two years later. During the project, I was given a lot of responsibility and was really able to develop as an architect in all areas from detailed design to customer relationships”, says Christofer Ödmark.

Our ambition was to create an iconic building that would stand as a symbol for the great outdoors and exercise

The function of the building

In many ways, Kotten is a classic cabin in the woods of which there are many in the Swedish countryside. A place where you can shower, have a sauna, get changed and have a cup of coffee or eat a picnic. Our ambition was to create an iconic building that would stand as a symbol for the great outdoors and exercise. Christofer Ödmark says that the competition gave him free reins even if the council wanted full control of the construction process as well as the end result. Therefore the choice was made to work with a general contractor and the one that won the tender was the local construction company Ängegärde Bygg with 23 employees. The lowest price was the deciding factor during the bidding process.

“Yes! we thought when we won the bid. It is fun to create a monument that even my grandchildren will get to see. This has been really important to us. We come from the area so this sports centre belongs to us as much as it belongs to the other members of the community”, says Stefan Johansson who is a partner in Ängegärde Bygg to Byggindustrin in the article Kotten was created by a young, untried fountain of ideas (3 Feb 2016).

Illustration: Tengbom
Illustration: Tengbom

A vision that stayed intact

”Sometimes, as an architect, you pass on a job to somebody else and then things happen along the way that turns it into something completely different from what you had in mind. That wasn’t the case here. All parties involved have kept the lines of communication open during the entire construction period”, says Hans Lindgren at Tengbom in the same article.

Looking back at the proposal we presented in the competition a few years ago, we see a result that remains strikingly similar. One small but beneficial change emerged through collaboration with all involved—the decision to use a vaulted roof. This adjustment simplified the installation while also enhancing the building’s shape.

Kotten Tengbom 2015
Photo: Ulf Celander

The oval shape was a challenge

An oval building is a rare sight, making it a unique design challenge. Kotten’s façade features approximately 170 wooden “scales,” produced in modules and assembled on-site. Tengbom developed a model to create the modules, enabling Ängegärde Bygg to install them in a way that gives the illusion of an oval shape. In reality, the structure consists of 50 sides. Even the rafters were individually designed to fit the building’s distinctive form.

Wood for the sake of the environment

Ecological thinking has been a constant during the work on Kotten. The overall material is wood, with an outer façade of pine and interior linings made from birch plywood. The façade material OrganoWood is a silicon-treated lumber that does not emit any hazardous chemicals, but still allows the wood to age and become grey naturally. The price tag was a factor throughout the process but Kotten is a proud example of how to build in an environmentally friendly and sustainable way with lots of character without the costs sky-rocketing. The total budget for Kotten was 23 million kronor.

Kotten Tengbom 2015
Photo: Ulf Celander

Partnership and local strength

Kotten is also the result of a successful local partnership with no less than 90 percent local partners.

”The partnership with Ängegärde Bygg has met all the criteria we have as architects. We kept in contact continuously during the entire process and it is clear that they have made a real effort to achieve our common vision”, says Christofer Ödmark.

Tengbom’s landscape architects played a key role in the project. They focused on creating an environmentally friendly construction, ensuring that only a few trees were felled. The team also designed the surrounding landscape. In that space, we created a playground, an outdoor gym, and a swimming dock.

Kotten Tengbom 2015
Photo: Ulf Celander

Out of the ashes into the trail

The Kungälv people have finally got their much awaited sports centre and it is yet again full steam ahead for all outdoor fanatics, young families and retired people to enjoy the nature around Svante Mosse. A proof of our appreciation was an opening party around Lucia time that attracted a very large and engaged group of people. The cherry on the cake was Kotten’s nomination for Building of the Year, Årets Bygge 2016. Christofer Ödmark and the rest of us feel both proud and honored by this recognition.

”It makes you want to do more projects now. But I have put the bar quite high for myself.”

How much do we see of you in Kotten?

Christofer Ödmark explains, “I believe in honesty, both in shape and material. Unnecessary complexity has never made sense to me. While the façade’s geometry may seem intricate, it follows a rational system. Even though Kotten is based on my design ideas, more than 10 colleagues at the office contributed to the project. Together, we brought this building to life.”

Contact person

Kajsa Crona

Practice Director Gothenburg
+46 727 07 79 73