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Thursday 14th February 2019

Repeatable Health Hubs

 

Venue: RICS, Great George Street, London, SW1P 3AD

Time; 7.45 - 10.15am

Design for Manufacture and assembly (DfMA) is an approach which focuses on the ease of manufacture and assembly. Come and join us as our expert panel discuss the benefits of applying pre-designed and manufacturing approaches to healthcare design through repeatable health hubs.

•  What are the principles of DfMA?
•  How is this being applied to the Healthcare sector through repeatable   health hubs?
•  What are the benefits and pitfalls?
•  How do we ensure flexibility and creativity in the design?
•  Can this be applied to all aspects of healthcare provision?

Speakers

Anastasia Chrysafi
Willmott Dixon

Anastasia has specialised in the healthcare sector for over 15 years, commencing her career as NHS advisor for the selection of LIFTCo partners and the delivery of a range of primary and community care projects.

 

She joined Willmott Dixon in 2009 to assist the company in gaining a position on the Department of Health’s ProCure21+ Framework (P21+) and subsequently carried out the role of National P21+ Framework Manager.

 

More recently Anastasia has led the development of Cura, Willmott Dixon’s pre-designed integrated healthcare hub. This innovative solution embraces design for manufacture and assembly principles and offers faster delivery together with quality, programme and whole life cost certainty. She is passionate about the benefits that it brings the NHS and its partners, particularly in response to the NHS Long Term Plan, the Five Forward View and NHS England’s vision for the future of NHS services based around new models of care; care in the community and closer to people’s homes.

Mark Rowe
Penoyre & Prasad
 
A Partner since 2012, Mark is the embodiment of the Penoyre & Prasad ethos, thanks to the creativity and integrity that define the projects he leads. It’s down to his broad and layered architectural experience, which spans a wide spectrum of complex projects from landmark healthcare buildings and mixed-use/residential developments to financial headquarters, schools and retail.
Keen to share his experience and knowledge, Mark teaches and examines at both the University of Westminster and the London Metropolitan University. He also works as a certified Quality Indicator (DQI) Facilitator and has accepted invitations to speak at a variety of conferences across the world from Canada to China.
Stefanie Brada
Willmott Dixon
 
Stephanie is a highly experienced healthcare planner whose career has included advisory roles to the NHS and the private sector across the full range of care provision. Her early career was in the NHS as a senior service manager and her subsequent career has concentrated on the impact of healthcare buildings on both strategic and day-to-day service delivery.

 

Stephanie has worked on a number of highly innovative developments that have successfully challenged both processes and outcomes in healthcare buildings. She was the healthcare planning lead on the recent P21+ Cost Reduction Programme - repeatable rooms project on behalf of Willmott Dixon. Within CURA she has developed this approach to enable the NHS to meet its healthcare goals in the most effective buildings that have the highest design standards in a guaranteed cost and programme framework.

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