UHC ZAGREB – REBRO phase III.
SERVICES DELIVERED
Construction project management – preparation phase
Review of technical documentation
Concept design: Gradit d.o.o.
Main and Detailed design: ZDL Arhitekti d.o.o.

ABOUT THE PROJECT
The project KBC Zagreb – Rebro, Phase III was developed as a complex infrastructure intervention aimed at modernising the hospital complex and strengthening its overall functionality. The project includes the construction of a new hospital building (approx. 35,900 m² gross floor area) together with supporting infrastructure essential for system operations.
It also includes a new parking garage (approx. 31,000 m²) with 1,045 parking spaces, connected via a linking tunnel, a new access road, and the reconstruction of the heat substation. The project is implemented within a programme for the recovery and resilience of healthcare infrastructure, financed through a World Bank loan (IBRD) and the national budget.

EU ALIGNMENT AND PROJECT LOGIC
The project KBC Zagreb – Rebro, Phase III is part of the Earthquake Recovery and Public Health Preparedness Project, financed through a World Bank loan (IBRD 9127-HR). Within this framework, the EU/IFIs logic is not an “architectural story”, but demonstrable public value: strengthening the resilience, safety and long-term functionality of critical healthcare infrastructure through a clearly defined scope and outcomes.rojekt KBC Zagreb – Rebro, faza III dio je Projekta obnove nakon potresa i jačanja pripravnosti javnog zdravstva, financiranog zajmom Svjetske banke (IBRD 9127-HR). U tom okviru EU/IFIs logika nije “arhitektonska priča”, nego dokaziva javna vrijednost: jačanje otpornosti, sigurnosti i dugoročne funkcionalnosti ključne zdravstvene infrastrukture kroz jasno definiran opseg i rezultate.
That is why the project preparation was set up as a tightly managed process, with a strong focus on quality control of the design documentation and the reduction of implementation risks before moving into construction. In such a model, reviews and control checkpoints (including architecture) are not a formality, but an integral part of the international standard for project preparation and delivery.