Walsh Construction, one of the largest contractors in the city of Chicago and in the United States, is leading the temporary conversion of a portion of the McCormick Place Convention Center into an Alternate Care Facility (ACF) for novel coronavirus patients.
Construction on the first 500 beds was completed on April 3. According to a report in the Chicago Tribune, 500 more beds (with 14 nursing stations) should be online this week and another 1,250 by April 20, with another 750 to follow. The facility will have the capacity to treat up to 3,000 low- to moderate-acuity patients across three of the convention center’s halls, where patients will be separated by level of care required.
In addition to patient rooms, the first phase has also seen installation of spaces for laundry machines, pharmacy services, medical supplies, housekeeping, and medical gas canister storage, according to the Chicago Tribune.
A Walsh Construction staff member views the first phase of the conversion of portion of the McCormick Place Convention Center into an alternate care facility for coronavirus patients. Photo: Press Pool
ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS, MPEA OVERSEEING CONVERSION OF THE CONVENTION FACILITY
The Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority (MPEA) in association with the United States Army Corps of Engineers is directing the conversion of McCormick Place into a facility focused on patient care, infection control, fire protection and life safety. The ACF is designed to relieve pressure on the hospital system by freeing up beds for more patients with severe COVID-19 cases in anticipation of the surge in positive COVID-19 diagnoses to come.
The temporary field hospital is expected to be complete by April 24, according to Walsh Construction. “We mobilized and began work immediately,” said Thomas Caplis, Vice President of Healthcare at Walsh Construction. “Walsh Construction is proud to support these extraordinary efforts of MPEA and Army Corps of Engineers that will offer essential care to our Chicago neighbors and much needed assistance to our vital healthcare system.”
Chicago-based Walsh Construction has a successful history of working directly with USACE and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to renovate and construct facilities and infrastructure on a fast-track basis. Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, Walsh has assisted healthcare institutions with trailers, tents, cargo boxes, negative pressure rooms, and establishing other temporary measures on an as-needed basis.
WALSH—122 YEARS IN OPERATION
Walsh Construction is the fifth largest healthcare contractor in the United States, providing construction services and delivering healing environments across North America. The Acute Care Facility at McCormick Place adds to its list of patient-first projects that include new hospitals, emergency departments, critical care units, and outpatient services.
Walsh Construction is part of The Walsh Group, a 122-year-old company providing design, build, finance and activation services across the building, transportation and water markets. The Walsh Group operates as Walsh Construction, Archer Western and Walsh Canada throughout 20 regional offices.
Related Stories
Coronavirus | Apr 5, 2020
COVID-19: Most multifamily contractors experiencing delays in projects due to coronavirus pandemic
The NMHC Construction Survey is intended to gauge the magnitude of the disruption caused by the COVID-19 outbreak on multifamily construction.
Coronavirus | Apr 5, 2020
King County, Wash., addresses homelessness and COVID-19 with rapid-response site conversions
The county is adding 2,500 beds within a dozen Assessment & Recovery Centers that DLR Group helped to design.
Coronavirus | Apr 4, 2020
COVID-19: Architecture firms churn out protective face shields using their 3D printers
Architecture firms from coast to coast have suddenly turned into manufacturing centers for the production of protective face shields and face masks for use by healthcare workers fighting the COVID-10 pandemic.
Coronavirus | Apr 3, 2020
Cities will survive the pandemic
Density may make it easier for the virus to spread, but let’s not forget that cities are in many ways the heart of society, and a springboard of big ideas, inventions, art, and culture.
Coronavirus | Apr 3, 2020
Kogniz Health launches AI-based fever detection cameras for crowds to help limit coronavirus spread
System continuously scans crowds for fever as they enter facilities to locate and isolate risks.
Coronavirus | Apr 3, 2020
27% of construction firms report layoffs amid COVID-19 outbreak, says AGC
The fast-worsening COVID-19 pandemic has triggered layoffs at more than a quarter of construction firms responding to an online survey released today by the Associated General Contractors of America. The finding, based on responses from earlier this week, contrasts with the government’s monthly employment report for March, which found that construction employment declined by 29,000 as of mid-March.
Coronavirus | Apr 3, 2020
Test facility in a box: Modular, walk-in booth design for coronavirus testing
To address the need for testing in urban areas for those without vehicles, CannonDesign architect Albert Rhee created a walk-in testing booth that is slated for public use.
Coronavirus | Apr 3, 2020
Survey of U.S. code officials shows trends in code compliance during COVID-19
The results of the survey tell us how jurisdictions throughout the U.S. are keeping up with inspections, new building permits and new construction.
Coronavirus | Apr 3, 2020
CallisonRTKL buoyed by overseas demand
Customer service across the globe remains No. 1 priority, says new CFO.