'CURA' Installed in Turin
John Hill
22. April 2020
Photo: Max Tomasinelli
One month after Italian architects Carlo Ratti and Italo Rota unveiled the Connected Unit for Respiratory Ailments using old shipping containers, the first CURA prototype has been installed inside a temporary hospital in Turin.
CURA was designed as a quick solution for increasing the capacity of ICUs in hospitals hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic. The open-source project consists of a 20-foot-long shipping container housing beds, ventilators, monitors, and other equipment for two patients.
Photo: Max Tomasinelli
Windows cut into the long sides of the container are intended for doctors "always get a sense of the status of patients both inside and outside the pods," but they could also allow for families of the patients to have some visual contact. The latter is an important concern given that hospitals are not allowing visitors or are distancing them from infected patients.
Photo: Max Tomasinelli
Photographs of the prototype show the container attached to an inflatable structure that serves as storage and changing room, what in the initial design was a corridor which connected multiple containers. CURA is installed in a former industrial shed next to 90 beds in an open-plan configuration. The greater area given the latter does raise the question: How quickly could CURAs be produced to fill the same amount of space if needed? Hopefully the downward trend of cases in Italy continues and such a need does not arise.
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'CURA' Installed in Turin
on 4/22/20