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  <title>Can Architecture Heal Us?</title>
  <description>  Timber&amp;amp;nbsp;instead of tiles, curiosity instead of corridors, and a 15-metre-high atrium designed to make people feel safer,&amp;amp;nbsp;healthier and more connected. Copenhagen’s Centre for Health proposes a new typology for public healthcare architecture.&amp;amp;nbsp;   In this episode, Michael Booth meets architect Dorte Mandrup, widely regarded as one of Denmark’s greatest living architects, to explore how a complex and often contradictory brief — openness and privacy,&amp;amp;nbsp;care&amp;amp;nbsp;and community — was translated into a warm,&amp;amp;nbsp;tactile&amp;amp;nbsp;and quietly radical public building.&amp;amp;nbsp;   Together they discuss the&amp;amp;nbsp;centre’s&amp;amp;nbsp;boomerang-shaped footprint, full timber construction and soaring atrium, and how architecture can gently nudge&amp;amp;nbsp;behaviour, foster&amp;amp;nbsp;wellbeing&amp;amp;nbsp;and create spaces that feel inclusive without feeling exposed.&amp;amp;nbsp;   Guest:&amp;amp;nbsp;  Dorte Mandrup, Arkitekt, Dorte Mandrup A/S&amp;amp;nbsp;  Host:  Michael Booth&amp;amp;nbsp;   Let's Talk Architecture is a podcast by Danish Architecture Center. Sound edits by Munck Studios.  </description>
  <author_name>Let's Talk Architecture</author_name>
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