• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Legat Architects Main Logo

Legat Architects

  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Services
    • Special Projects
    • Team
  • Careers
  • Insights
  • Contact Us
  • Projects
    • Learning
    • Wellness
    • Community

Healthcare Facilities Symposium and Expo Presents Individual Award to Steve Blye

November 30, 2018 News, Wellness by Legat Architects

Legat Architects’ Steve Blye recognized at national conference for “profound contribution to healthcare industry”

[Austin, Texas] – Steve Blye’s hands are often speckled with color . . . evidence of his devotion to shaping pioneering healthcare environments. The colors come from the sketches, renderings, and paintings that he creates, often late into the night, to give healthcare providers a clear vision of their facilities.

Marc Budaus (right) of HKS presents the Individual Award to Steve Blye (left) at the 2018 Healthcare Facilities Symposium and Expo.

Steve, associate director of healthcare and creative director at Legat Architects, has dedicated nearly 40 years to transforming the healthcare industry. He is a planner, an architect, an interior designer, a teacher/mentor, and a design juror. His freehand creations convey building design, as well as the emotions . . . of a visitor arriving at a late-night emergency room, a patient awakening from surgery in an unknown room, or a caregiver working the night shift.

The Healthcare Facilities Conference and Expo, one of the nation’s largest annual gatherings of industry leaders, recognized Blye’s healthcare contributions by presenting him the Individual Award in its Healthcare Symposium Distinction Awards. The program recognizes “projects and individuals who have made a profound contribution to the healthcare design industry.” Blye accepted the award at the Austin Convention Center on October 8, 2018.

Steve Blye’s concept sketch for Northwestern Medicine Central DuPage Hospital inpatient building, terraced parking structure, and helipad

According to the organization, “The Individual Award seeks to distinguish a professional in the fields of healthcare planning, design, construction, and operations who has displayed leadership and vision over a significant period of the recipient’s career. This award looks to recognize an individual whose passion has driven organizations or project teams to enhance the healing environment.”

Blye’s design of Northwestern Medicine’s Delnor Hospital Special Care Nursery uses ellipses and cheerful pastels to create a more peaceful setting, while also providing caregivers 360-degree views of patient bays.

“Good Enough” Isn’t Enough

Blye’s hand-drawn concepts entice clients, but they are not just pretty pictures. Rather, they are fully realized design solutions that support today’s technology, fulfill the clinician’s needs for efficiency, comfort the family caregiver, and maximize patients’ control of their environment.

He has adapted his freehand talents to work with his open approach to problem solving and design. Repeatedly, Blye’s concepts have brought about the client response that so many designers struggle to achieve: “I get it.”

At a kick-off meeting for a minor patient room renovation, many were surprised when Blye took out his notebook: he had four pages of questions.

Casey Frankiewicz, Legat’s director of healthcare, said, “Steve injects a mindset that ‘good enough’ isn’t enough into every project, whether it’s the global content, micro community of the department, brand consistency, detailing how a countertop meets a wall, or designing a façade to respect its surroundings. This passion for quality covers all levels of design: scale, geometry, texture, maintenance, constructability, color, and pattern to the closing details of artwork, accessories, and furniture.”

Design development rendering for Northwestern Medicine Marianjoy Rehabilitation Hospital’s Outpatient Pediatric Clinic

Recently, Blye helped a client determine that the themes of nature and excitement should inspire the design of an outpatient pediatric rehabilitation clinic. His concept, featuring an abstract tree as a centerpiece, infused the space with vibrant colors and intriguing shapes. He even went so far as to introduce a scavenger hunt-like game into the concept to further the interest of this specific population.

Wood finishes, curving shapes, and indirect lighting reduce stress at the Northwestern Medicine Central DuPage Hospital Neurological Intensive Care Unit designed by Steve Blye. Multiple layers of observation maximize doctor/nurse views to patients, and medical booms give caretakers 360-access to beds.

The Human Side of Healthcare

Besides warmth, Blye’s drawings contain something often overlooked in computer-generated images: people. Not just people standing around, but people interacting, exploring, engaging . . . people experiencing their environment.

Blye is adamant about designing spaces that distract from the normal anxiety-inducing healthcare process, not just for the patient, but also for the family members and providers. By making the day more enjoyable for clinicians, he often says, the environment makes the healthcare experience more enjoyable for patients.

For instance, Blye’s recent design of a linear accelerator vault uses faux skylights, wood tone materials, a natural stone-faced wall, rubber flooring, and adjustable lighting to make radiation treatments less intimidating.

Steve Blye (right) with Iowa State University students at the 2014 Healthcare Facilities Symposium and Expo. Blye mentored the students for the AIA Chicago Healthcare Student Design Charrette.

Industry Advocate

From students to seasoned professionals, many within the architectural field have benefited under Steve’s tutelage. He has mentored college students interested in healthcare design and served as a juror for national healthcare design competitions.

Legat’s design principal Ted Haug said, “Since joining Legat six years ago, Steve has not only elevated our design output, but also instilled in our staff a willingness to embrace challenges.”

Three times, Steve served as a mentor for the American Institute of Architects’ (AIA) Healthcare Student Design Charrette program. He welcomed teams of students, attended all their meetings, spent a weekend guiding them on their projects, accompanied them to their final presentation, and then took them on a tour of downtown Chicago . . . all on his own time.

Design development rendering for winter garden lobby at Loyola University Health System Outpatient Center

The Art of the View

Casey Frankiewicz’s first experience with Steve Blye’s work was as a classmate in the University of Illinois’ undergraduate architecture program. One of the first projects challenged students to carve space from a seven-inch cube. Most students communicated their concepts in a conventional way: by showing 2-D drawings of the cube.

“There was one that was much different,” said Frankiewicz. “Steve Blye’s concept showed a stage from the vantage of a theatergoer. A cube, which had legs, was illustrated moving across the stage as if in a talent show to display different views. This is early evidence of Steve’s drive to design solutions that are relatable to everyone.”

The earliest evidence of Blye’s passion for design stems back to age six, when he proclaimed to the world his aspirations on the Peoria, Illinois-based children’s TV show Captain Jinks and Salty Sam. While other kids said they wanted to be astronauts, football players, and ballerinas, Steve surprised the audience when he said, “I want to be an architect.” A fitting introduction for a lifelong passion for design.

See more of Steve Blye’s projects and drawings.

Contact us to learn more about healthcare facility design, or comment below to share your thoughts on this post.

Share

In the News

CommunityEmployee Insights

Train station design: regaining the power of rail

tinley park train station legat architects feature
CommunityNews

Hyatt Place and Hyatt House Hotels in East Moline Bring Upscale Lodging to The Bend on the Mighty Mississippi

Hyatt Place Hyatt House East Moline Rendering
News

In Memory: Alan F. Bombick, AIA (1955 – 2016)

Alan F Bombick feature

Looking For More? Check Out The Full Insights.

View All Chevrone right

Get Our Newsletter

Sign up for Legat’s newsletter to uncover design tips, news, and all things architecture.

Footer

Legat Logo Mark
  • About
    • Our Story
    • Services
    • Special Projects
    • Team
  • Careers
  • Insights
  • Projects
    • Learning
    • Wellness
    • Community

Chicago, IL

312 258 9595

Columbus, OH

614 228 7758

Gurnee, IL

847 662 3535

Iowa City, IA

319 450 0510

Oak Brook, IL

630 990 3535

Quad Cities, IA/IL

309 517 5536

Social link iconSocial link iconSocial link iconSocial link iconSocial link iconSocial link icon
  • Branding Assets
  • File Storage
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy

©

2025

Legat Architects. All rights reserved.

Website designed by ArtVersion.