Size

Built: 6,190 sq ft / 575 sq m
Site: 10,763 sq ft / 1,000 sq m

Year

2013

Status

Completed

Client

Partners In Health

Alan Ricks, AIA, Int FRIBA

Alan Ricks, AIA, Int FRIBA

Founding Principal & Chief Design Officer

Alan is a Founding Principal and the Chief Design Officer of MASS Design Group. He leads strategy and design of the 100-person firm, which has projects in over a dozen countries that range from design to research to policy—a portfolio that continues to expand the role of design in advancing a more just world.

In 2017 Alan and MASS were awarded the National Design Award for Architecture from the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum. First launched at the White House in 2000 as an official project of the White House Millennium Council, the annual Awards program celebrates design as a vital humanistic tool in shaping the world, and seeks to increase national awareness of the impact of design through education initiatives.

In 2018 he and MASS received the Arts and Letters Award for Architecture from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Each year the Academy honors over 70 composers, artists, architects, and writers with awards and prizes. Recipients must be nominated by an Academy member and this year the jury included Annabelle Seldorf, James Polshek, Tod Williams, Billie Tsien, Steven Holl, Kenneth Frampton, and Thom Mayne.

Alan is a member of The Forum of Young Global Leaders with the World Economic Forum, a community of over 800 men and women selected under the age of 40, who operate as a force for good to overcome barriers that elsewhere stand in the way of progress. The community is made up of leaders from all walks of life, from every region of the world, and from every stakeholder group in society.

Currently, he is the William B. and Charlotte Shepherd Davenport Visiting Professor at the Yale School of Architecture and has previously taught at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. He regularly speaks, writes, and creates films focused on the role of architecture in catalyzing social change. Chris Anderson, chief curator of TED, described his TED talk as “a different language about what architecture can aspire to be.”

He has a Bachelor of Arts from Colorado College and a Master of Architecture from the Harvard Graduate School of Design.

Sarah Mohland

Sarah Mohland

Principal — Bozeman

Sarah Mohland joined MASS Design Group in 2011 as a founding member of the Kigali Office. Sarah has since contributed to nearly all of MASS’s built work in Rwanda. She now manages MASS projects in the Northern Rockies and is a faculty member of the School of Architecture at Montana State University in Bozeman, Montana – bringing home the lessons she learned while leading the Kigali office for nine years.

Sarah has led the design and implementation of projects that span the typologies of higher education, primary education, housing, and healthcare. Most notably Sarah contributed to the design and construction of Butaro Doctors’ Housing, the Butaro Cancer Centre of Excellence, the Butaro Cancer Support Centre, and the University of Global Health Equity Student Housing. In all of her projects, she cultivates a deep engagement with local builders, material suppliers, and local agencies, as she seeks to challenge the building industry to improve construction standards and maximize impact during the construction process. With a deep investment in creating equitable opportunities within the design profession, Sarah has led several training initiatives at MASS, including forming the curriculum for the African Design Centre and leading the Design Build of Ruhehe Primary School. She has taught at the University of Rwanda, formerly known as the Kigali Institute of Science and Technology.

Sarah is from Great Falls, Montana, and earned a Master of Architecture from Montana State University and a Bachelor of Environmental Design from Montana State University.

Sierra Bainbridge, RLA

Sierra Bainbridge, RLA

Senior Principal & Managing Director — Boston

"I believe that every project is an opportunity to create a movement. To inspire this momentum, we must be one with the community, and together, go beyond the bare minimum."

Sierra began work with MASS in 2008 focusing on landscape architecture and joined full time in 2009 to finalize design and oversee implementation of the Butaro Hospital, MASS’s first project. Currently Sierra directs the ongoing design and implementation of MASS’s planning and architectural projects and is currently overseeing The Kayanja Center, an academic facility supporting rural health care delivery and research in Uganda, a number of African Conservation Schools in DRC, Tanzania, Zambia, and Rwanda, and the Butaro Hospital Expansion Plan, among others. Those completed include Butaro Hospital, the Umubano Primary School, the Butaro Doctors’ Housing, and the Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center.

Prior to joining MASS, Sierra worked for four years at James Corner Field Operations, primarily in design and oversight of implementation of Section 1 of the New York City High Line. Sierra has taught graduate level studios at various universities and from 2010-2012, Sierra served as Head of the Architecture Department at the Kigali Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) in Rwanda. At KIST, Sierra was instrumental in shaping the current curriculum. She is invited to speak regularly, including the keynote address at the Healthcare Design Conference, serving as a Sasaki Distinguished Visiting Critic at the Boston Architectural College, and lecturing at the Carter ‘Lectures In African Studies’ series, the University of Pennsylvania, Harvard University, University of Toronto, and the American Institute of Architects, among others. Select features of Sierra’s work with MASS Design Group include A+U Magazine, Lotus, Mark Magazine, and Detail.

Sierra received her Bachelors of Arts in Art and Architectural History from Smith College and her Masters of Landscape Architecture and Masters of Architecture from the University of Pennsylvania.

Project Team

Alan Ricks, Sierra Bainbridge, Sarah Mohland, Jean Paul Uzabakihro, Jean Paul Sebuyahi, Amelie Ntigulirwa, Michelle Benoit, Ben Hartigan, Christian Uwinkindi, Esdras Nkumbuyabera, Andrew Brose

Collaborators

Equipment Donation, Design Assistance: Big Ass Fans
Landscape Design: MASS Design Group
Engineering Design: MASS Design Group
Engineering and Construction Advisor: Ubatsi
Engineering Advisor: Kayihura Nyundo, NOUS Engineering
Infection Control: Richard Vincent

The burden of non-communicable diseases (such as cancer, diabetes, or cardiovascular and lung disease) is disproportionately rising among low- and middle-income countries and populations. In Rwanda, this is most acutely seen in cancer, where more than 3,000 cancer diagnoses were registered between 2007 and 2011.

Photo of Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center, Photo by Iwan Baan, Daytime Exterior of the Building with Woman

© Iwan Baan

But while developing countries like Rwanda—which registered more than 3,000 cancer cases between 2007 and 2011—represent nearly 80% of the global cancer burden, they receive only 5% of global spending.

Photo of Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center, Photo by Iwan Baan, View of Exterior of the Building and Butaro Campus

© Iwan Baan

To respond to this underserved and growing need, Partners In Health and Rwanda’s Ministry of Health developed The Butaro Cancer Center of Excellence—the first comprehensive cancer center in East Africa—in response to the growing and underserved need for cancer treatment in the region.

Photo of Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center, Photo by Iwan Baan, Nighttime View fo Exterior of the Building and Ramp Entrance

© Iwan Baan

Photo of Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center, Photo by Iwan Baan, View of Exterior of the Building at Nighttime

© Iwan Baan

Photo of Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center, Photo by Iwan Baan, Interior of the Patient Ward

© Iwan Baan

Located next to the Butaro District Hospital, the Butaro Cancer Center of Excellence offers a spectrum of diagnostic oncology and treatment services, including chemotherapy, surgery, a pathology laboratory, counseling, and palliative care.

Photo of Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center, Photo by Iwan Baan, View of Landscape from the Paitent Ward

© Iwan Baan

Photo of Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center, Photo by Iwan Baan, Patient Ward with View of Individual Chairs

© Iwan Baan

Photo of Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center, Photo by Iwan Baan, Patient Ward with View of Reception Counter

© Iwan Baan

The center is designed to facilitate patient and staff flows, and comfortably accommodate patients and their attendants during extensive treatment regimens.

Photo of Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center, Photo by Iwan Baan, Conference Room with Custom Shelving

© Iwan Baan

Patients enter from the south wing, with its interior and exterior waiting rooms. From there, they proceed to a nearby consultation room, and then into the expansive chemotherapy infusion space.

Photo of Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center, Photo by Iwan Baan, View of Exterior of the Building and Butaro Campus

© Iwan Baan

Treatment in this new setting protects cancer patients with weakened immune systems from contagious infections by limiting their exposure to patients in the nearby hospital. The design maximizes natural cross ventilation and air flow and includes strategically located ultraviolet germicidal irradiation lights, which neutralize 99 percent of harmful pathogens.

Photo of Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center, Photo by Iwan Baan, View of Exterior of the Building and Butaro Campus

© Iwan Baan

Photo of Butaro Ambulatory Cancer Center, Photo by Iwan Baan, Interior of the Patient Ward

© Iwan Baan

The facility and much of the furnishings were built with locally sourced materials, which were custom-assembled on site. The facility’s construction created more than 550 jobs for the local economy, 30 percent of them held by women.

The Butaro Cancer Center of Excellence is the third of five MASS projects on the campus, including the Butaro District Hospital, Doctors’ Housing, Doctors’ Sharehousing, and an Oncology Support Center.