The Australian Health Design Council The Australian Health Design Council

Australian Health Design Conference | Turning healthcare inside out | BCEC Brisbane, 4 - 6 November 2026 Australian Health Design Conference | Turning healthcare inside out | BCEC Brisbane, 4 - 6 November 2026


Preliminary Agenda

AHDC2026 will explore bold proposals that challenge conventional healthcare design. Explore our agenda and plan your trip to Brisbane. More details to be published in August 2026










Explore:
Member Site Tours

Kick off the conference with exclusive visits to recently completed projects, led by the designers, planners and health professionals that worked on them. Tours start and finish close to the CBD, with time to head straight to the next event, Engage. Stay tuned for tour announcements. Tickets are available to AHDC members and strictly allocated on a first come first served basis. 

Date: Wednesday 4 November
Time: 8.30 - 12.30
Pick-up Location: TBC
Cost: $50
Open to: AHDC members only



Engage:
Research Lunch & Workshop

From Evidence to Implementation: Structuring Collaboration for Impact. Engage with researchers, designers, consultants and healthcare professionals in an interactive and participatory event designed to foster collaboration and tackle big questions.  Through targeted lightning presentations and structured, theme-based roundtable discussions, participants will work collaboratively to identify priority challenges and opportunities, develop potential research–practice initiatives, and establish partnerships capable of advancing innovation and impact in healthcare design. A light lunch will be provided during the presentations. Tickets will be available from August 2026. 

Date: Wednesday 4 November
Time: 13.00 - 16:30
Location: TBC
Cost:
 $50 (Free for Conference delegates)
Open to: Public Access



Welcome:
Opening Night Reception

Mark the start of the conference with drinks and canapés in a relaxed setting. The Welcome reception will be a chance to connect with colleagues, make new connections and get set for two days of conference sessions. This event is free to attend for all conference delegates and Engage workshop attendees. 

Date: Wednesday 4 November
Time: 18:00 - 20:30
Location: TBC
Cost: Free, RSVP essential
Open to: Conference delegates and Engage attendees only



Day One:
Thursday 5 November

Day One will open with a Welcome to Country and feature a full day of presentations and panel discussions. Browse the conference poster exhibition during breaks in the pre-function space. Registration + Coffee from 07:45. Morning tea, lunch and afternoon tea provided. Post-session drinks until 18:30. 

Date: Thursday 5 November
Time: 8:30 - 17:30 
Location: BCEC Sky Level
Open to: Conference delegates


S01

THU: 08:30 - 10:00

Conference Welcome and Welcome to Country

Designing the modern cave: research, wellbeing and humans

Human health is both simple and complex. While intrinsically connected to nature, it is continually shaped by the environments we inhabit. Environmental influences on health are well established in areas such as air quality, access to daylight, temperature, cleanliness and safety.

Less understood is how our environments make us feel. The emotional and psychological impacts of space remain under-researched, highlighting an enduring tension between art and science. Are there universal environmental qualities that influence wellbeing? Which spatial conditions contribute to stress, and which promote calm, restoration and connection?

As built environments have evolved alongside advances in technology, so too have the drivers of design. At the intersection of design and research lies an opportunity to bring greater rigour to understanding how the built environment supports mental and emotional health. Our cave-dwelling ancestors instinctively sought shelter, warmth and safety. As designers, researchers and practitioners, what is our contribution to preserving and advancing human health within the modern-day cave?


Tara Veldman
Managing Director and Health Sector Leader, BLP

Tara Veldman is Managing Director and Health Sector Leader at BLP. Combining interests in psychology, art and architecture, she is fascinated by how buildings and spaces make people feel. Her work spans hospitals, health hubs, education precincts, research labs and residential communities. Informed by living in Australia, the Netherlands, Frankfurt and the Middle East, Tara integrates nature and Evidence-Based Design to create human-centred environments. In 2025, she was awarded the inaugural Australian Health Design Council Gold Medal.


S02

THU: 10:30 - 12:30 

Disruptive by design: tools for the future

Drawing on an interdisciplinary background in psychology, marketing management and design, this presentation explores the practical tools, mindsets and approaches needed to navigate and shape the future of health care. Three interconnected areas are covered:

  • leading through disruption: strategies for navigating complexity and change, especially in interdisciplinary contexts;
  • designing with, not for: practical tools for co-design, creativity and collaborative innovation; and
  • imagining different futures for health and aged care, including robotics, biophilic and playable design, with reflections on bridging the practice and research gap.

Through stories, provocations and real-world examples, this presentation challenges audiences to rethink how care is designed, delivered and experienced, and to consider their own role in shaping the systems, places and relationships that will define the future.


Professor Evonne Miller
Professor of Design Psychology, Queensland University of Technology

Evonne Miller is Professor of Design Psychology at Queensland University of Technology (QUT) and Director of the QUT Design Lab. From 2024 to 2025, she was the inaugural Queensland Health Research Chair in Healthcare Design at Clinical Excellence Queensland. Her research focuses on the relationship between people and their environments, with a particular emphasis on design for ageing and creating spaces that support the health, wellbeing and quality of life of older people.

Accessible design: a hospital and health service perspective

Metro South Hospital and Health Service has run three major projects concurrently, providing an opportunity to observe design outcomes and consider how project requirements intersect with diversity and inclusion goals. Building standards led these projects to focus heavily on mobility disabilities, particularly for patients and visitors. To encourage more inclusive design, Metro South established an accessibility guidance group, which created MSH Guidance Note 16: Design Requirements, Accessibility. Through collaborative development of this guidance note, the group identified practical modifications to better support the diverse community, with key focus areas including high sensory environments, fixture and fitting constraints, and lighting. The guidance group comprises a wide range of subject matter experts, including staff and consumers with lived and living experience of disability, alongside clinical experts and members of the Service Expansion team.


Louise Cutler
Infrastructure Design Lead, Metro South Hospital and Health Service

Louise Cutler is an architect whose career spans 30 years in Australia and abroad. She is passionate about creating high quality environments that enhance the wellbeing of all health facility users. Louise has led multi-disciplinary teams delivering hospitals and health facilities of all sizes in regional and metropolitan settings, with a constant focus on collaboration and inclusion. Career highlights include JCU Dental, the masterplanning and development of Greenslopes Private Hospital campus, and her work with Metro South's Accessibility Guidance Group.

Cairns Hospital: from hospital to integrated health precinct

The Cairns Hospital Campus Master Plan challenges the idea of what a hospital is, turning healthcare inside out into a connected civic, clinical and innovation ecosystem. As the primary referral centre for Tropical North Queensland, Cairns is moving beyond an acute facility to become a tertiary health campus within a dynamic precinct of education, research and industry. Rather than adding buildings, the plan redefines the campus as a living system, integrating clinical care with research, learning and biotechnology, and forging connections to the city and James Cook University. It creates a platform for innovation, collaboration and discovery, where healthcare becomes a driver of regional growth. Grounded in climate-responsive tropical design and recognising First Nations connections to Country, the plan embeds resilience at every scale, positioning Cairns as a leading model for regional health infrastructure.


Kirstie Irwin
Principal, BVN

Kirstie Irwin has over 20 years' experience delivering technically complex healthcare projects in Australia and the UK, with expertise spanning master planning, health, aged care, mixed-use residential and commercial schemes. She has led clinical and architectural teams on many notable health projects, bringing local and international perspectives to clinical planning and design. Kirstie believes successful healthcare environments should be deeply connected to their physical, cultural and environmental context, creating places that support wellbeing and a sense of belonging.

Leena Singh
Chief Executive, Cairns and Hinterland Hospital and Health Service

Leena Singh commenced as Chief Executive in February 2023, bringing over 20 years' experience in senior executive roles across health systems in New South Wales, Queensland and New Zealand. Her background includes Chief Executive, Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer roles across a range of health services. Leena is known for building strong relationships with stakeholders and staff, and is committed to improving health outcomes for the local community, particularly those most vulnerable.


S03

THU: 13:30 - 15:15

Future-ready health campuses: lessons from Queensland

Recent masterplanning work for Queensland's hospital expansion projects has provided an opportunity to rethink how major health campuses can respond to growth, changing models of care and community expectations.

This presentation shares lessons from developing shared visions for major health campuses, balancing immediate service demands with future needs, and engaging stakeholders to shape places that are adaptable, connected and responsive to local communities. Attendees will gain insights into how strategic planning creates healthcare environments that support better outcomes for patients, staff and communities, while serving as enduring public assets for future generations.


Blake Lepper
Deputy Director-General, Health Infrastructure Queensland

Blake leads delivery of the Hospital Rescue Plan and broader health infrastructure programme across Queensland. Before relocating to Australia, he was Head of Infrastructure Delivery at Health New Zealand, coordinating national hospital infrastructure investment. He previously held a senior role at Te Waihanga, the New Zealand Infrastructure Commission, leading advisory work across strategic planning, procurement and commissioning. Blake holds degrees in Physics and Law from the University of Otago.

Designing healthier Queensland places

If prevention is a priority for Queensland, the built environment must be understood as part of the health system. Drawing on the Healthy Places, Healthy People work led by Queensland Health and the Office of the Queensland Government Architect, this presentation shows how urban design, planning and infrastructure investment can support physical activity, social connection, mental wellbeing and long-term resilience.

Rather than treating design quality as an aesthetic extra, the session positions it as preventative health infrastructure. Queensland evidence shows that better access to services, active transport networks and green corridors is associated with higher levels of walking and physical activity.

Local case studies, including the Active School Travel program, Oxley Creek Transformation and regional main-street renewal, show how research and cross-agency partnerships translate into healthier places. Design decisions, the presentation argues, must be treated as health decisions.


Leah Lang
Queensland Government Architect

Leah Lang is Queensland Government Architect and a Fellow of the Australian Institute of Architects. She leads design initiatives across housing, Olympic infrastructure, health and economic development, bringing together diverse stakeholders and championing climate-responsive design. Leah's work recognises that well-designed built environments can significantly enhance physical and mental health and improve community outcomes. Her leadership is reflected in appointments to prominent design panels and juries, where she advocates for high-quality, human-centric design that shapes a positive legacy for Queensland.

Panel discussion: from vision to reality

This panel brings together redevelopment leads who have navigated the full project lifecycle, from planning through to commissioning. Drawing on direct experience, they share candid insights on what worked, what did not, and the lessons learnt along the way.

Our panel will explore:

  • How do you maintain a project's original vision and community engagement through years of delivery?
  • What practical trade-offs arise when balancing resilience, flexibility and cost?
  • How can early design decisions better anticipate the realities of commissioning?

Fiona Brewin-Brown
Project Director, Caboolture Hospital Redevelopment Project, Metro North Health

Fiona has worked across the public and private health sector for more than 30 years, leading portfolios in nursing, health service delivery, service commissioning and health infrastructure delivery in Australia and New Zealand. Since 2010 her focus has been health infrastructure, including delivery of the Queensland Children's Hospital Project infrastructure component and various roles within the Department of Health Capital Infrastructure Division. Most recently, she led Metro North Health's successful completion of Stage 1 of the Caboolture Hospital Redevelopment, with a focus on design, construction contract management and operational commissioning.

Richard Christensen
Executive Director, Infrastructure Planning, Delivery and Commissioning, Gold Coast Hospital and Health Service

Richard has more than 35 years' experience in public health service delivery, with the past 15 years focused on infrastructure projects supporting improved health care outcomes. This has included projects managed and delivered by the health service directly, as well as projects delivered in partnership with the Department of Health capital and infrastructure team. Before moving into infrastructure, Richard worked in clinical settings as a physiotherapist.

Kerry Armstrong
Executive Director, Development & Infrastructure, Mater

Kerry Armstrong leads Development and Infrastructure at Mater Misericordiae Limited, overseeing a land, buildings and equipment portfolio exceeding $2 billion. She has held senior roles across Queensland Health, Jacobs and CBRE, leading capital programs worth more than $3.6 billion, including major hospital redevelopments and public-private partnerships such as Herston Quarter and STARS. Kerry works closely with boards, clinicians, government and industry to deliver sustainable infrastructure that improves community outcomes.


S04

THU: 15:45 - 17:30

Regenerating a Community's connection to healing (Country)

The Peninsula University Hospital redevelopment aims to create a connected health campus that reflects the community needs of Frankston and surrounding areas, allows for future growth, and positions it firmly in the discourse of how the health of Country directly affects the collective health of the community living on it. The new hospital aims to empower a community to become active participants in the future health of the region.

The design of the hospital adopted the theme Healing Country, Healing People, a guiding narrative co-designed with Traditional Owners. This engagement identified a range of opportunities to embed indigenous thinking to improve the health of all through understanding the health of Country, including:

  • Rehabilitation: healing people and Country
  • Celebrating the landscape and connection
  • Truth telling and the impacts of colonisation
  • A living and evolving culture: past, present and future

  • Mark Healey
    Director, Bates Smart

    Mark joined Bates Smart in 2003, spending his early years working abroad on large-scale hospitality projects in the UK and Asia. On his return to the Melbourne studio, he became the lead interior designer on the award-winning Royal Children's Hospital and has since led several high-quality healthcare projects including Tweed Valley Hospital, Bendigo Hospital and the new Peninsula University Hospital. Mark also brings significant multi-residential, civic and commercial experience to complex briefs.

    Ryan Browne
    Senior Associate, Architectus

    Ryan Browne is a Senior Associate at Architectus with a background in complex health, civic and cultural projects across Australia. He is passionate about creating healthier, happier places for communities and brings a collaborative, people-focused approach to every design task. Ryan's portfolio includes the recently opened Peninsula University Hospital (Victoria), Melton Hospital (Victoria), Toowoomba Hospital Master Plan and Redevelopment (Queensland) and Lismore Base Hospital Redevelopment Stages 3B and 3C (NSW).

    A place to belong: designing Wentworth Health Service

    Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, not merely the absence of disease. This presentation shows how healthcare design influenced by belonging, connection and supportive environments can make a difference, building on the proposition that healthcare should occur in a physical space that enhances a person's desire to improve themselves. The session shares a practical and collaborative approach for translating clinical requirements into environments that feel unique, respectful and safe.

    Through the case study of Wentworth Health Service, collaboration led to strong art and design elements reflecting local identity, helping the community regain faith in the healthcare system. By listening to community experiences and working as a collective team with aligned goals, the key takeaway is a set of belonging checks to test whether design decisions improve user experience and contribute to a holistic healthcare system.


    Priyanka Rathod
    Sector Lead, Wellness, NBRS

    With over 22 years' experience across the built environment, Priyanka leads the Wellness team at NBRS, driving projects that prioritise health, wellbeing and human-centric design. Her work is grounded in understanding how spaces influence physical, mental and social wellbeing, shaping environments that support healthier outcomes for communities. Passionate about collaboration, she works closely with project stakeholders and design teams to resolve complex challenges and deliver spaces that meaningfully enhance user wellbeing.

    Drinks and Nibbles served in Exhibition space until 18.30



    Day Two:
    Friday 6 November


    Day Two of the conference sessions will dive deeper into projects and panel debates. Browse the conference poster exhibition during breaks in the pre-function space. Registration + Coffee from 07:45. Morning tea and lunch provided. After the official conference close, drinks and nibbles will be served in the break-out space until 17:00. 

    Date: Friday 6 November
    Time: 8:30 - 15:30
    Location: BCEC Sky Level
    Open to: Conference delegates


    S05

    FRI: 8:30 - 10:15

    Day Two Welcome and Acknowledgements

    Wellness, culture, Country and community-controlled health design

    The Institute for Urban Indigenous Health (IUIH) is a not-for-profit Community-Controlled Health Service leading the planning and delivery of health and family wellbeing services for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population of South East Queensland.

    Drawing on IUIH's work across the region, this presentation explores how health infrastructure can support self-determination, cultural continuity and improved outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

    A key case study is the Dakabin Wellness Precinct: a state-of-the-art primary healthcare campus that places wellness at the centre of community and establishes a new cultural hub. The campus is planned around a landscaped, pedestrianised elliptical courtyard, prioritising the repair of Country and creating culturally safe spaces for care, gathering and everyday life.

    The presentation outlines practical strategies for embedding community-controlled health into design processes and how these principles translate into built form.


    Wayne Ah-Boo
    Chief Executive Officer, Institute for Urban Indigenous Health Ltd

    Wayne Ah-Boo is a Torres Strait Islander whose family heritage is from the islands of Mabuiag and Iama (Yam). Born in Brisbane, he holds a Bachelor of Business (Accounting) and is an Adjunct Professor at the University of Queensland. With over 40 years working in Indigenous affairs across government and community-controlled health, Wayne is currently CEO of the Institute for Urban Indigenous Health. He is a strong advocate for community-controlled services and the employment and career opportunities they create for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

    David Kaunitz
    Director, Kaunitz Yeung Architecture

    David Kaunitz is an architect and co-founder of Kaunitz Yeung Architecture, an Australian practice internationally recognised for community-led design with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities across remote and regional contexts. His work focuses on health, aged care, housing and cultural projects that integrate architecture with Country, culture and community governance. David is also an Associate Professor of Practice at the University of Sydney, teaching Indigenous-led co-design and socially responsive architecture. The practice has received numerous national and international awards, including the UIA Vassilis Sgoutas Prize.

    Standardise to innovate: NSW's vision for agile healthcare

    As healthcare models evolve rapidly, health infrastructure faces growing pressure to keep pace with changing clinical, operational and community needs. This presentation explores how lean, scalable and evidence-informed infrastructure can support more flexible models of care through standardising inpatient unit (IPU) design across NSW Health Infrastructure capital projects.

    It offers a firsthand look at the development of the NSW Health Infrastructure IPU Standard Design, created through extensive evidence-informed design, stakeholder consultation and multidisciplinary collaboration between Health Infrastructure, clinicians, planners, operational teams and architects.

    This approach also reduces clinician engagement time during design and streamlines planning and delivery, directing specialist input to areas of greatest strategic and clinical value.

    The initiative examines how standardised IPU layouts, ward composition and common components can:

  • Improve efficiency and consistency
  • Reduce unnecessary complexity
  • Strengthen sustainability and long-term resilience
  • Retain flexibility for innovation, evolving models of care and local responsiveness

  • Sandra Stewart
    Design Principal, Health Infrastructure NSW

    Sandra Stewart is an architect with experience across senior executive roles in practice and cross-sector industry leadership, spanning mixed use, retail, commercial and health. She balances creative design with strategic leadership, having worked on major social and health infrastructure projects from greenfield town centres to public hospital precincts. Sandra is a Fellow of the Australian Institute of Architects, and an advocate for the profession through various committee roles, including the AIA National Acumen Panel.


    S06

    FRI: 10:45 - 12:30

    Beyond the sales pitch: Māori and Indigenous health design

    Healthcare spaces aren't just places for treatment, they reflect who belongs and what we value as a society. In Aotearoa New Zealand, bringing Te Ao Māori into the design of these environments has shifted thinking away from generic "instruments of care" toward a holistic approach where spaces feel restorative, grounded in culture and built to serve communities over the long term. All spaces are health spaces, presenting opportunities to improve the wellness of their inhabitants.

    This synopsis covers recently completed Māori and Indigenous health design projects, starting with an overview of Māori health concepts and the history of Māori involvement, and lack thereof, in the development of health infrastructure. It traces the path to more recent projects involving Mana Whenua tribal representatives, the strengthening of relationships and co-design processes, and the implications for design. A review of projects from the last ten years highlights their successes, challenges and lessons for the future.


    Te Aritaua Prendergast
    Associate Principal, Warren and Mahoney
    Te hau tuku mai runga Maukatere, Te tama whangai i te pioke Kurakura, Kai Tahu e!

    Te Ari has wide-ranging experience on large architectural and urban design projects, having worked as cultural design expert during the Christchurch post-earthquake rebuild. He currently works across multiple health and civic projects, developing design guides for new hospitals and refurbishments that cater for the diverse cultural needs of tāngata whaiora patients. Te Ari specialises in realising indigenous aspirations in design, delivering culturally appropriate outcomes consistent with iwi and hapu values.

    Breaking the cycle: designing for civic contribution

    The healthcare development cycle is well known: a capital budget is released, a design team engaged, and the pressure is immediate to deliver the brief, nothing less, rarely more, on time and on budget. The result is buildings that face inward, consuming their surroundings rather than activating them, solving today's problem but deferring the opportunity to be something greater.

    This presentation offers insight into the decision-making framework and design methodology that has enabled the Liverpool Health and Academic Precinct, one of the most complex health infrastructure projects in NSW, to position itself as more than another hospital redevelopment. Instead, it functions as generative infrastructure, enabling future development, seeding an innovation precinct and redefining what healthcare environments owe to the public realm.

    Attendees will leave with an understanding of how strategic leadership, a values-led brief and sustained stakeholder engagement can transform a single building commission into a precinct vision that genuinely transforms a campus and a town centre.


    Rod Pindar
    Partner, F+P Architects

    Rod Pindar leads F+P Architects' health and education work, engaging and connecting teams to deliver large-scale, complex public infrastructure across metropolitan and regional NSW, including Royal North Shore, Gosford, Wyong and New Maitland hospitals. He has been lead architect on the Liverpool Health and Academic Precinct since its inception, guiding nearly a decade of design and delivery. Rod views health infrastructure as urban placemaking, shaping projects from precinct master planning to patient experience.

    Panel Discussion: designing care everywhere

    This panel session explores the evolving role of health planning in shaping healthcare systems beyond the traditional hospital campus. As models of care shift toward prevention, community-based services, virtual care and integrated networks, infrastructure planning must also evolve.

    The panel will examine how legacy hospital models can unintentionally constrain modern care, highlighting the importance of designing flexible, adaptable and future-focused systems that respond to changing demographics, workforce pressures, technology and consumer expectations. The discussion centres on:

    • Planning services, operational models, patient flows and integrated care pathways across the wider health ecosystem
    • The value health planners bring to strategic decision-making, service planning and infrastructure investment
    • How health planning supports broader system transformation, aligning infrastructure, operations and clinical strategy for sustainable healthcare delivery

    Jodi Hallas
    Executive Director, Health Service Strategy and Planning, Metro North Hospital and Health Service

    Jodi Hallas is a senior executive with more than 25 years' experience across public, private and non-government sectors, leading strategy and planning across service delivery, infrastructure and workforce domains. She recently served on the Queensland Health executive team as Acting Deputy Director-General, Clinical Planning and Service Strategy Division and Workforce Division. Jodi holds a Bachelor of Science, a Master's in Education and Leadership, and is an AICD graduate.

    Rhonda Johnson
    Principal Clinical Service Planner, Health New Zealand

    Rhonda Johnson specialises in service and campus planning across Aotearoa New Zealand, with over 20 years of clinical experience in both rural and tertiary settings. She combines clinical leadership with expertise in system, service and facility planning, enabling her to navigate the complexities of care across the continuum. Rhonda's work focuses on shaping integrated, future-focused models of care that support equitable access and improved outcomes for patients, whānau and communities.

    Holly McMillan
    Senior Project Manager, Clinical Planning, Metro North Hospital and Health Service

    Holly McMillan is a Business Analyst and Health Planner with Queensland Health, holding a Graduate Certificate of Health Service Planning and accredited membership of the Australasian Association of Health Planners. Her career spans statewide planning projects, HHS-wide service strategy and major hospital expansions across Metro South. Following a breast cancer diagnosis in 2023, Holly became a passionate advocate for integrating lived experience in healthcare design and delivery. She is currently Senior Project Manager for Clinical Planning of the new Queensland Cancer Centre at Metro North HHS.


    S07*

    FRI: 13:30 - 15:30 

    * OPEN ACCESS - Attend Session 07 with a free Showcase ticket.

    An evidence-based framework for nature-based rehabilitation

    Recovery after stroke takes considerable time, with significant physical, sensory, psychological and cognitive impairments changing survivors' perception, understanding, communication, movement and interactions with the world. Rehabilitation also requires the active engagement of stroke survivors, their families and carers to achieve improved outcomes. Inpatient rehabilitation settings must therefore address dwelling, choice, dignity and autonomy differently to acute hospital environments.

    This presentation addresses how connection to outdoors and nature can support holistic health and wellbeing for stroke survivors undertaking rehabilitation, through access to active therapeutic challenges, social settings and valued, restorative environments. It introduces the InFoLIA framework, a practical, evidence-based framework for healthcare providers, planners and designers to guide health-promoting nature-based design in stroke rehabilitation settings. The co-design process used to develop this framework over a three-year transdisciplinary design inquiry will also be outlined.


    Belinda Seale
    Architect, Research Fellow and PhD Candidate, Deakin University

    Belinda Seale is a registered Architect in Victoria and an accredited member of the Access Consultants Association of Australia. She brings over 25 years of practice experience in the design and delivery of enabling and therapeutic environments for people with a range of disabilities and conditions. Belinda runs her own inclusive design consultancy and is a Research Fellow and PhD candidate at Deakin University, where her research focuses on environmental design for health, wellbeing, equity and inclusion.

    Resilient hospitals: procurement, vision and collective care

    Designing hospitals that are resilient, adaptable and meaningful demands more than good intentions. It requires visionary briefs, deeply engaged stakeholders and procurement methodologies that either enable or constrain design ambition.

    This session compares two emerging hospitals, Bankstown and Melton, to unpack how different procurement models shape the journey from vision to built reality. It explores how Managing Contractor and PPP approaches influence stakeholder engagement, design flexibility, risk, whole-of-life value and the capacity to respond to future models of care.

    Acknowledging that several architecture practices have contributed to masterplanning and design on both projects, the presentation will clearly articulate roles, interfaces and collaborative processes to ensure appropriate attribution and transparency. With two principals presenting, the session allows space for debate and foregrounds lessons that can inform more equitable, trusted and enduring healthcare environments.


    Kim Small
    Principal, Architectus

    Kim Small focuses on the design of healing patient environments, with specialist expertise in hospital campus master planning and staging and decanting strategies. She has contributed to major acute hospital projects across New South Wales, Queensland and the ACT, including New Bankstown Hospital, Canberra Hospital Expansion and Prince of Wales Hospital Redevelopment. Her experience also spans regional health projects such as Kempsey, Bundaberg and Sutherland Hospitals.

    Sannah McColl
    Principal, Architectus

    Sannah McColl is a strategic thinker who has planned and delivered major health projects in Victoria, championing evidence-based design alongside functional, efficient solutions. She has managed significant government projects from feasibility through to construction completion, with a portfolio including the Pathway to 144 Mental Health Beds, Frankston Hospital Redevelopment Stages 2 and 3, and the Joan Kirner Women's and Children's Hospital. Sannah was previously a Principal with Lyons and NTC Architects.

    Conference Closing Remarks

    Drinks in exhibition space until 17:00



    Showcase:
    Public Session, Exhibition and Drinks

    Everyone is welcome for the final session (07) of the conference: a dynamic series of short presentations followed by the official conference close. Afterwards, join us for drinks and nibbles while browsing the poster exhibition. Stay tuned for updates and tickets from August 2026. 

    Date: Friday 6 November
    Time: 13:00 - 17:00
    Location: BCEC Sky Level
    Cost: Free, Registration Required
    Open to: Public Access




    The Australian Health Design Council Inc is a Non-Profit Incorporated Association A0057375N |  PO Box 3026 Eltham 3095 | ABN 94 786 233 514 | AHDC © 2025 All rights reserved