Making Veterans Administration healthcare projects “better planned, better delivered” is the new goal of the VA’s Office of Construction and Facilities Management, according to Executive Director Stella S. Fiotes, AIA.
CFM plans, designs, and constructs (with the help of private-sector AEC consultants, of course) all VA projects greater than $10 million in value. The office has responsibility for design construction standards, sustainability, seismic corrections, historic preservation, and physical security.
The VA has a massive portfolio—151 hospitals, 827 community-based outpatient clinics, and 300 veterans’ centers, Fiotes told attendees at the recent American College of Healthcare Architects/AIA Academy of Architecture for Health (ACHA/AAH) Summer Leadership Summit in Chicago. Nearly two-thirds of its facilities are more than 60 years old, and 30% have a historic designation or could qualify for one.Fiotes said the VA is in the midst of a major policy shift, from “figuring out what’s broken and fixing it as much as possible”—a strictly brick-and-mortar approach—to “figuring out what services veterans need and adapting service-delivery models, facilities, and funding distribution to better meet those needs.”
The new policy, known as VA Facilities Management Integrated Planning, is directed at addressing such concerns as the need to right-size facilities based not only on where veterans are today, but where they’ll be in the future, given that many older veterans are expected to move to the warmer regions of the U.S.
Fiotes said the VA is also looking to forge affiliations with public agencies, universities, and healthcare organizations as a way to stretch its capital investment budget. Serving the healthcare needs of veterans in rural areas remains a persistent concern, she said, as does the need for the VA to promote wellness and disease prevention for its clients.
Another major initiative: the Patient-Aligned Care Team. “Primary care is the foundation of VA healthcare delivery,” said Fiotes. PACT is designed to provide “one-stop” patient-centered care through coordinated “teamlets” consisting of a physician, a nurse, an LPN or technician, and a clerk, along with a clinical pharmacist, a dietitian, and a social worker. “No clinics have been designed based on this model, but we’re working on it,” said Fiotes. “We believe they can save 15-20% on costs.”
As for sustainability, Fiotes said all VA projects must earn at least LEED Silver or two Green Globes; every project is evaluated for the feasibility of using renewable energy. Structural resilience, particularly against the threat of rising sea levels or a tsunami, has become a priority as well.
Eight major VA projects—in Las Vegas, Milwaukee, Pittsburgh, San Antonio, San Diego, Cape Coral, Fla., and two in Biloxi, Miss.—will undergo post-occupancy evaluation this fiscal year to determine how well the buildings are meeting the needs of veterans and healthcare providers. Starting in FY 2014, all major projects will experience POEs within 18-24 months of occupancy.
Two innovation programs—selected from over 450 suggestions from Veterans Health Administration employees—are under way: the development of standardized designs for outpatient clinics, and research on making wayfinding in VA facilities consistent across the board.
Fiotes ended her talk to ACHA/AAH attendees on a tempting note: “We have over $6 billion in projects that have been identified and need to be acted on.”
Read our full report from the ACHA/AAH Summit.
Related Stories
| Jul 20, 2012
2012 Giants 300 Special Report
Ranking the leading firms in Architecture, Engineering, and Construction.
| Jul 20, 2012
Data Centers Report: Demand ‘exploding’
BD+C's Giants 300 Top 25 AEC Firms in the Data Center sector.
| Jul 20, 2012
Office Report: Fitouts, renovations keep sector moving
BD+C's Giants 300 Top 25 AEC Firms in the Office sector.
| Jul 20, 2012
K-12 Schools Report: ‘A lot of pent-up need,’ with optimism for ’13
The Giants 300 Top 25 AEC Firms in the K-12 Schools Sector.
| Jul 20, 2012
Higher education market holding steady
But Giants 300 University AEC Firms aren’t expecting a flood of new work.
| Jul 20, 2012
3 important trends in hospital design that Healthcare Giants are watching closely
BD+C’s Giants 300 reveals top AEC firms in the healthcare sector.
| Jul 20, 2012
Global boom for hotels; for retail, not so much
The Giants 300 Top 10 Firms in the Hospitality and Retail sectors.
| Jul 20, 2012
Gensler, Stantec, Turner lead ‘green’ firms
The Top 10 AEC Firms in Green Buildings and LEED Accredited Staff.
| Jul 19, 2012
Renovation resurgence cuts across sectors
Giants 300 reconstruction sector firms ‘pumping fresh blood in tired spaces.’