“Our design team was privileged to have the opportunity to design for public servants who experience high levels of stress in the course of performing highly technical work,” said LEO A DALY Minneapolis Managing Principal Cindy McCleary. “To have the project recognized for design excellence in well-being is truly an honor, but as importantly, it symbolizes the success this project has achieved in supporting the mental and physical health of those who work in and interact with the Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office.”
The 64,000-square-foot Hennepin County Medical Examiner facility sets a new national precedent for buildings of this type. It is visited by doctoral forensic students, and it houses multiple autopsy-training spaces with large overhead screens for observation.
The facility is nestled in a wooded landscape and spatially separated into two structures: office and laboratory. Designers harvested abundant natural light for employees in both areas. The office structure uses a branched orientation to multiply exterior walls and amplify access to views of the outdoors. The autopsy suite uses splayed daylight wells and a sloped ceiling to throw natural light into the laboratory below while obscuring views from above.
With 12 autopsy stations, among them two for decomposed remains, the facility also includes storage coolers and freezers for 130 decedents. Air cleanliness is paramount in this laboratory, whose mechanical system supplies high-volume air changes and positive pressurization to manage air quality. Computational fluid-dynamics tests confirmed that medical examiners breathe 100 percent clean air when using the lab.
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The Hennepin County Medical Examiner facility is accredited by the National Association of Medical Examiners and serves a region comprising nearly half of Minnesota and Wisconsin. It houses laboratory space for autopsies and tissue analyses. The lab is designed to be among the most advanced facilities of its type.
“Our goal was to create a work environment that focuses on wellness for those who perform technically challenging and often traumatic work,” said LEO A DALY Senior Architect and National Laboratory Specialist Steven Andersen. “Every square foot is designed to support medical examiners and staff who experience mental and physical strain at much higher levels than most professionals.”