Hard to believe, but we’re only six months away from the day—January 1, 2014, to be precise—when the Affordable Care Act will usher in a radical transformation of the American healthcare system. Healthcare operators are scrambling to decipher what the new law will mean to their bottom lines and capital facility budgets.
For advice on how AEC firms can succeed under Obamacare, we turned to Patrick E. Duke, Senior Vice President at KLMK Group (www.klmkgroup.com), which advises healthcare operators on the planning and construction of capital facilities.
Duke, a BD+C “40 Under 40” honoree (Class of 2010), says firms must home in on three trends: 1) the shift by healthcare providers toward “population-based management”; 2) the push toward a fast-paced “retail environment” in healthcare; and 3) heightened interest in energy and operational cost savings among healthcare operators.
1. POPULATION-BASED MODEL HELPS SPREAD THE RISK
Today’s version of “fee-for-service,” whereby healthcare operators are reimbursed more on volume than on patient outcome, is on the way out, says Duke. It is being replaced by a system in which healthcare operators will be given a set amount of money to manage the care of a defined population of patients.
TOP HEALTHCARE ARCHITECTURE FIRMS
2012 Healthcare Revenue ($)1 HDR Architecture $185,763,0002 HKS $134,000,0003 Cannon Design $109,000,0004 Perkins+Will $100,962,2555 Stantec $98,471,4576 NBBJ $96,169,0007 HOK $84,300,0008 SmithGroupJJR $66,700,0009 Perkins Eastman $63,800,00010 RTKL Associates $60,746,000
TOP HEALTHCARE ENGINEERING FIRMS
2012 Healthcare Revenue ($)1 AECOM Technology Corp. $180,210,0002 Jacobs Engineering Group $77,100,0003 URS Corp. $43,327,3324 Smith Seckman Reid $40,105,6005 KPFF Consulting Engineers $30,000,0006 Affiliated Engineers $28,217,0007 TTG $24,719,9058 Parsons Brinckerhoff $22,700,0009 Dewberry $21,226,70210 Allen & Shariff $20,300,000
TOP HEALTHCARE CONSTRUCTION FIRMS
2012 Healthcare Revenue ($)1 Turner Corporation, The $1,856,850,0002 McCarthy Holdings $1,750,000,0003 Clark Group $1,055,387,8704 Skanska USA $833,093,7005 Brasfield & Gorrie $780,723,2476 JE Dunn Construction $759,053,6317 DPR Construction $749,013,6118 PCL Construction Enterprises $729,454,5149 Whiting-Turner Contracting Co., The $551,510,96710 Robins & Morton $545,100,000
Giants 300 coverage of Healthcare brought to you by DuPont www.fluidapplied.tyvek.com.
To be profitable under such a regimen, says Duke, healthcare operators will have to control costs by, ironically, keeping people out of the hospital. They will do so through various means: limiting the use of expensive emergency room visits, treating patients in lower-cost outpatient facilities, keeping people healthy through wellness programs, and cutting down on readmissions.
“The common response among providers thus far has been to cast as wide a net as possible to spread the risk over a broader population, just like life insurance,” says Duke. Some healthcare systems are growing their patient bases by buying up or merging with other providers. A more common practice is to build specialty facilities to provide more profitable services outside the hospital setting.
For example, the University of Maryland Medical System will open a 68,000-sf cancer center at its Upper Chesapeake Health affiliate in Bel Air, Md., in September. The new center will save local residents the 30-mile trip to UMMS’s Baltimore campus, while solidifying its position in the suburban market northeast of the city.
“Healthcare providers are looking at the services they can offer that are more specialized, with better outcomes in a lower-cost setting,” says Duke. AEC firms must be prepared to respond to this shift in direction.
2. ‘RETAIL HEALTHCARE’ PUTS EMPHASIS ON SPEED TO MARKET
As healthcare moves into more of a retail mode, getting specialty outpatient and primary-care outreach units to market as quickly as possible will be top-of-mind for hospital execs. Duke believes that will make them more open to modular construction. “If modular can get the facilities up faster to capture a growing market and get the cash registers ringing sooner, they’ll go with it,” he says.
Repurposing existing spaces is another route that healthcare systems are using to widen their patient bases quickly. In the Atlanta area, for example, Kaiser Permanente continues to explore repurposing vacant Blockbuster stores into neighborhood clinics, which then feeds patients into the Kaiser system. Vanderbilt University Medical Center has done the same at 100 Oaks Mall in Nashville, with great success.
“Healthcare operators want designers and contractors who can evaluate a building and come back quickly with solutions,” says Duke. Firms that can offer systems solutions for new facilities—designing standard units, bundling them, and rolling them out fast—will also be in demand, he says.
3. SAVING EVERY NICKEL ON ENERGY AND OPERATIONS
Healthcare providers are finally getting serious about saving on energy and operational costs. “Before Obamacare, they focused on supply chain and wouldn’t get serious about energy or facility operations because they didn’t need to,” says Duke. “As systems consolidate, they have the scale explore options like energy monitoring and retrocommissing, to identify sustainable cost-saving solutions.”
Another route to controlling costs is to develop new facilities under Performance Guaranteed Facilities arrangements. Under a PGF, the hospital contracts with a service provider to finance, plan, design, build, and maintain facilities over a 20- to 30-year period, at a fixed total cost.
“The hospital owns the building and the land, but the service provider takes the risk of developing the facility and maintaining it, including replacing equipment on an ongoing basis,” says Duke. This sheds a lot of risk for the hospital. If, for example, the OR goes down due to a maintenance error, the PGF provider takes the hit.
Duke says that, in Canada, value-for-money studies showed that life cycle cost savings averaged 15-20% on a net present value basis through the use of PGFs to build and operate new healthcare facilities versus traditional project delivery options.
The witching hour for Obamacare is fast approaching. Will your firm be ready to compete in the new American healthcare landscape?
Read BD+C's full Giants 300 Report
Related Stories
Student Housing | Jul 31, 2024
The University of Michigan addresses a decades-long student housing shortage with a new housing-dining facility
The University of Michigan has faced a decades-long shortage of on-campus student housing. In a couple of years, the situation should significantly improve with the addition of a new residential community on Central Campus in Ann Arbor, Mich. The University of Michigan has engaged American Campus Communities in a public-private partnership to lead the development of the environmentally sustainable living-learning student community.
MFPRO+ New Projects | Jul 31, 2024
Shipping containers converted into attractive, affordable multifamily housing in L.A.
In the Watts neighborhood in Los Angeles, a new affordable multifamily housing project using shipping containers resulted in 24 micro-units for formerly unhoused residents. The containers were acquired from a nearby port and converted into housing units at a factory.
Adaptive Reuse | Jul 30, 2024
Empty mall to be converted to UCLA Research Park
UCLA recently acquired a former mall that it will convert into the UCLA Research Park that will house the California Institute for Immunology and Immunotherapy at UCLA and the UCLA Center for Quantum Science and Engineering, as well as programs across other disciplines. The 700,000-sf property, formerly the Westside Pavilion shopping mall, is two miles from the university’s main Westwood campus. Google, which previously leased part of the property, helped enable and support UCLA’s acquisition.
Geothermal Technology | Jul 29, 2024
Rochester, Minn., plans extensive geothermal network
The city of Rochester, Minn., home of the famed Mayo Clinic, is going big on geothermal networks. The city is constructing Thermal Energy Networks (TENs) that consist of ambient pipe loops connecting multiple buildings and delivering thermal heating and cooling energy via water-source heat pumps.
High-rise Construction | Jul 29, 2024
Safdie Architects’ Shanghai office tower features glass-enclosed corner garden that ascends the 35-story structure
Safdie Architects has announced the completion of LuOne Mixed-Use Complex—a business, retail, and entertainment development in the Luwan district of Shanghai, China. The mixed-use complex consists of an eight-level retail galleria, which opened in 2018, and a 35-story office tower, which recently reached completion.
Casinos | Jul 26, 2024
New luxury resort casino will be regional draw for Shreveport, Louisiana area
Live! Casino & Hotel Louisiana, the first land-based casino in the Shreveport-Bossier market, recently topped off. The $270+ project will serve as a regional destination for world-class gaming, dining, entertainment, and hotel amenities.
Smart Buildings | Jul 25, 2024
A Swiss startup devises an intelligent photovoltaic façade that tracks and moves with the sun
Zurich Soft Robotics says Solskin can reduce building energy consumption by up to 80% while producing up to 40% more electricity than comparable façade systems.
Codes and Standards | Jul 25, 2024
GSA and DOE select technologies to evaluate for commercial building decarbonization
The General Services Administration and the U.S. Department of Energy have selected 17 innovative building technologies to evaluate in real-world settings throughout GSA’s real estate portfolio.
Great Solutions | Jul 23, 2024
41 Great Solutions for architects, engineers, and contractors
AI ChatBots, ambient computing, floating MRIs, low-carbon cement, sunshine on demand, next-generation top-down construction. These and 35 other innovations make up our 2024 Great Solutions Report, which highlights fresh ideas and innovations from leading architecture, engineering, and construction firms.
MFPRO+ News | Jul 22, 2024
Miami luxury condominium tower will have more than 50,000 sf of amenities
Continuum Club & Residences, a new 32-story luxury condominium tower in the coveted North Bay Village of Miami will feature more than 50,000 sf of indoor and outdoor amenities. The program includes a waterfront restaurant, dining terraces with resident privileges, and a private dining room outdoor pavilion.