Mohalla Clinics designed by Architecture Discipline

Mohalla Clinics, Delhi by Architecture Discipline

The Mohalla Clinics by Architecture Discipline is one such solution that aims at accessibility, the immediacy of care, economical deployability, and affordability, along with a socially integrative approach to health and well-being.
Mohalla Clinics designed by Architecture Discipline
Mohalla Clinics, Delhi by Architecture Discipline 1

A prototype for a primary care center built out of discarded shipping containers, the Mohalla Clinics bring affordable medical services to vulnerable communities in an optimistic and high-quality environment.

India’s health infrastructure is facing one of its biggest crises in the post-Independence era. For many years, the country has fared poorly on health infrastructure indices — the Human Development Report 2020 shows a national ratio of only 5 beds per 10,000 people. Existing facilities are highly privatized and expensive, with high costs of treatment that are often paid out-of-pocket by patients. These limitations were exacerbated further by Covid-19 and the stress it exerted on our public health systems. Smaller, grassroots–level medical facilities that provide subsidized services and are quickly deployable are a viable solution to this crisis, bringing affordable care to a broader population.

The Mohalla Clinics by Architecture Discipline is one such solution that aims at accessibility, the immediacy of care, economical deployability, and affordability, along with a socially integrative approach to health and well-being. A prototype for a primary care center, it is built out of used shipping containers salvaged from various container yards in Delhi. The clinic’s design is adapted from Life Community Medical Facility (LifeCMF), a modular health facility concept designed by the firm. It is developed on a pro bono basis for the Delhi Government’s Aam Aadmi Mohalla Clinics program with financial support from Tata Power’s CSR wing. In the first phase, 20 units will be deployed in various urban settlements in Delhi, which will scale up to 500 units in upcoming phases.

Two unit models have been developed for the Mohalla Clinics. Type A comprises an examination room, a reception and waiting area, a pharmacy accessible from outside, and a washroom, making it suitable for routine health checks, testing, and medicine purchasing. Type B is a variation of this model, with a digital reading room on the upper level and an adjoining terrace accessible through a spiral staircase. This model provides a quiet space for study in dense settlements where such facilities are limited. As they are manned 24/7, they are accessible at all times of the day and can act as rain shelters when they are not in use.

The clinics are composed of two 20-foot-long containers separated by a 1.2 m–wide metal deck that also serves as an entryway to the two halves. The repurposed containers are coated with red exterior paint, with logos and signage painted in white. To protect the clinic’s interiors from Delhi’s searing heat, the containers are enveloped with micron insulation consisting of non-woven thermally bonded fiber, a non-flammable and hypoallergenic material. Glazed wall sections consist of hermetically sealed double-glazed units with aluminum frames, allowing the clinics to be naturally lit while preventing heat ingress. The units are anchored in place with small concrete pile footings that cause minimal impact to the ground.

The Mohalla Clinic’s interior finishes create an optimistic and clean environment for patients, using materials and fixtures that are patient-safe and easy to maintain. Walls are paneled with volatile organic compound (VOC)-free ply-pasted birchwood, and the floors are covered with hospital-grade vinyl flooring. Insulated drywall partitions separate individual spaces, with an opaque glass partition screening the pharmacy from the waiting lounge. The clinic is equipped with essential furniture, like examination beds, washbasins, desks, tables and chairs, seating benches, and storage space. Connected to the waiting lounge via the pharmacy, the washroom features a medical-grade stainless steel counter with a foot-operated wash basin, along with water-conserving plumbing fixtures.

To create a seamless plug-and-play operation, server rack power strips are incorporated into the clinic. The facility is lit with under-lighting strips concealed with pelmets and is cooled with 1.5-ton air conditioners whose outdoor units are located on the rooftop. The air-conditioning units include microfilters to create a dust-free internal environment. The water requirements for the washroom are fulfilled by a 200-liter water tank on the clinic’s roof. The services on the roof are concealed with a galvanized iron mesh, painted to match the clinic’s external appearance.

The clinics can be entirely prefabricated and transported to their locations with a forklift, requiring minimal on-site assembly. Prefabrication allows for greater quality control and precision in finishing, minimizing pollution due to construction activities and on-site errors. For the firm, the process of converting discarded shipping containers into ready-to-use clinics involved four steps:

  1. Identifying containers that are fit for reuse
  2. Calculating the insulation and service requirements for the clinic
  3. Identifying suitable materials for interior finishes to create a low-maintenance, sterile, and high-quality space, which also fosters a sense of positivity and happiness
  4. Engineering a low-impact foundation to anchor the clinic in place safely.

The clinics can be deployed rapidly, taking around 15 days for completion depending on the time taken for container procurement, site identification, and logistics. With complete prefabrication, this duration can even be brought down to 2-3 days. The quick construction of the prototype allows it to be deployed virtually anywhere, with the possibility of airlifting the units to emergency situations like disaster-struck regions or war zones.

The clinic’s design capitalizes on the structural strength of a discarded shipping container and works with it as a module, reducing the need for costly modifications or custom-built additions. In this manner, it redefines post-industrial waste as a medium for the equal distribution of affordable health services, integrating them into a circular model of reuse. By taking something forgotten and giving it a new lease of life through the Mohalla Clinics, Architecture Discipline proposes a sustainable solution for the health infrastructure crisis in our country.

Project Facts

Location: Delhi, India
Team:
Akshat Bhatt, Heena Bhargava, Jishnu Murali
Area: 500 sq ft./50 sq.m.
Completion: May 1 (First unit)

Drawings

Gallery of Mohalla Clinics

One Response

  1. Cost of this in per sft omitted very cleverly….but we all know the reason……after all achitects are involved plus politicians are involved too….

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Recent

Edwin Lutyens' bust which was replaced by C. Rajagopalachari's bust in Rashtrapathi Bhavan

“Changing The Statue Does Not Change the Room”—Geethu Gangadhar on Edwin Lutyens’ Bust Removal

The current Indian government replaced Edwin Lutyens’ bust with freedom fighter C. Rajagopalachari’s at Rashtrapati Bhavan, framing it as decolonisation. But symbolic gestures don’t dismantle colonial mindsets embedded in governance, caste, and institutions. Geethu Gangadhar raises an important question: whether this removal is a way to eradicate colonial baggage or systemic removal of history.

Read More »
Massing during construction, retaining the exposed concrete facade composition, cross columns and profiled beams. Archival collection of Tibet House, 1977. Accessed in 2026

Brutalist India | Tibet House, New Delhi

As part of Brutalist India series Bhawna Dandona writes about Tibet House in New Delhi which is a non-profit cultural centre dedicated to preserving Tibetan heritage, founded in 1965 at the Dalai Lama’s request. The current building’s foundation was laid in 1974, with architect Shivnath Prasad.

Read More »
Vivek Rawal

Architecture, Power, and the Poor | “As a profession, architecture lacks moral position and has become complicit in the neoliberal dispossession of the poor.”—Vivek Rawal

Vivek Rawal argues that architecture—as a profession—is structurally aligned with political and economic power rather than social justice. He critiques how architectural education and practice prioritise developers and real estate over communities, turning housing into a market commodity. Even movements like sustainability and participation, he says, often become tools for elite consumption rather than genuine empowerment. True moral reform, according to Rawal, would mean architects relinquishing control and enabling community-led design and housing decisions.

Read More »
The Chunli Guesthouse, Shanghai, China by TEAM_BLDG 1

The Chunli Guesthouse, Shanghai, China by TEAM_BLDG

The Chunli Guesthouse, Shanghai, China by TEAM_BLDG’s response to nature, memory, and the spirit of place. The design takes “Catching” as its spiritual core, emphasizing the relationship between the architecture and the surrounding rice field landscape.

Read More »

Featured Publications

New Release

Stories that provoke enquiry into built environment

www.architecture.live

Subscribe & Join a Community of Lakhs of Readers

We Need Your Support

To be able to continue the work we are doing and keeping it free for all, we request our readers to support in every way possible.

Your contribution, no matter the size, helps our small team sustain this space. Thank you for your support.

Contribute using UPI

Contribute Using Cards