The Sales director at Halton, explains how it supplied an ultraclean ventilation system based on controlled dilution principles for 35 operating theatres in the new hospital buildings at the Karolinska University Hospital in Solna, Sweden.
Paweł Borowiceki, Sales director for Central Europe at global indoor air solutions technology specialist, Halton, explains how the company supplied an ultraclean ventilation system based on controlled dilution principles for 35 operating theatres in the new hospital buildings at the Karolinska University Hospital in Solna in Sweden. He describes the challenges of designing the system when, at the time, the range of surgeries to be performed was unknown.
The Karolinska University Hospital is one of Europe’s premier health facilities, and is coupled with the Karolinska Institute, which has an international reputation for pioneering medical discoveries. Two buildings, with state-of-the-art equipment, enable patients to receive medical care to the highest international standards. The main aim behind the new project was to offer high quality care in a safe, attractive, and sustainable environment.
Karolinska is also a major teaching hospital that educates and trains tomorrow’s medical specialists and healthcare professionals. As such, the building must be up-to-date and capable of adapting to meet the changing demands of the latest medical procedures. The hospital must be easily renovated to meet future operational and clinical needs.
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