flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Medical offices are filling space vacated by retail

Healthcare Facilities

Medical offices are filling space vacated by retail

Healthcare developers and providers like the locations, traffic, and parking these spaces offer.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | October 1, 2019
Medical offices are filling space vacated by retail, Rosedale Center in Minnesota's Twin Cities

A rendering of an expanded Rosedale Center in Minnesota's Twin Cities, which when completed will include a medical office building. Image: Rosedale Center

The 1.2 million-sf shopping mall Rosedale Center in Roseville, Minn., yesterday disclosed its plans for a $100 million-plus expansion that will add a hotel, grocery, multifamily housing, fitness centers, restaurants, coworking spaces, more retail, and a medical office building.

Within the $400 billion global market for healthcare construction, two-fifths of all new retail transactions are for medical offices, compared to 2% a decade ago, according to recent AIA estimates. The number of medical centers in retail space—which Accenture put at 2,800 in 2017, compared to 351 in 2006—could nearly double by 2022, according to JLL projections.

As more developers, landowners, and retail strip owners look for ways to bring a medical facility to their properties, “nontraditional retail spaces for healthcare services are expected to continue to rise in popularity,” predicts JLL in its 2019 research report “Retail and the New Healthcare Consumer.”

 

Medical office buildings reflect the 'Amazon effect'  

That medical offices are finding their way into empty retail space partly reflects the “Amazon effect” that has made online ordering a prevalent mode of shopping and has left bricks-and-mortar vacancies in its wake.

“Healthcare is seeking out locations that are convenient and accessible to their patients,” explains Steve Barry, president of Rendina Healthcare Real Estate, a developer based in Jupiter, Fla. “Retail often has great visibility, great access to traffic count, and plenty of parking.”

Rendina has been exploring this trend for a while now, he says. A few years ago, the firm developed a project for Hilton Head Regional Healthcare in South Carolina that placed a 60,000-sf outpatient facility inside a vacated Publix supermarket with a shopping mall.

Rendina is currently in the process of developing a project that will create an 80,000-sf healthcare facility within a regional shopping mall that Barry says is repositioning itself as a lifestyle center that includes entertainment and grocery venues. Barry couldn’t identify the location or client for this project, but says its construction should start next year.

Retrofitting a retail store for conversion to a medical office depends on the level of care being provided, which may have structural and air ventilation requirements, says Barry.

From a land-pricing and operational cost standpoint, moving healthcare into retail could actually be more expensive than, say, opening a stand-alone facility, because retail stores, says Barry, are generally in higher-density (and higher-rent) locations.

What’s more important, however, is attracting the right kinds of customers to these buildings. “Patients are exerting far more control over where they go for care,” he says.

Barry foresees this trend having some runway left. He expects to see new variations and models, too: for example, his firm is working on developing a hybrid urgent-emergency care facility under one roof, so that patients could access the appropriate care and be charged appropriately for it. Medical offices, says Barry, “would be part of this rehab mix.”

He believes that, despite technology advancements that allow patients to access care from their homes or phones, “healthcare in general will always have a need for space.”

Related Stories

| May 16, 2012

Balfour Beatty Construction taps Kiger as VP of operations

Kiger will manage current relationships and pursue other strategic clients, including select healthcare clients and strategic project pursuits in the Central Tennessee region.

| May 7, 2012

4 more trends in higher-education facilities

Our series on college buildings continues with a look at new classroom designs, flexible space, collaboration areas, and the evolving role of the university library.

| May 7, 2012

2012 BUILDING TEAM AWARDS: Fort Belvoir Community Hospital

A new military hospital invokes evidence-based design to create a LEED-certified facility for the nation’s soldiers and their families.

| May 7, 2012

2012 BUILDING TEAM AWARDS: Audie L. Murphy VA Hospital

How a Building Team created a high-tech rehabilitation center for wounded veterans of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.

| May 3, 2012

2012 BUILDING TEAM AWARDS: Rush University Medical Center

This fully integrated Building Team opted for a multi-prime contracting strategy to keep construction going on Chicago’s Rush University Medical Center, despite the economic meltdown.

| May 3, 2012

Ground broken for $94 million hospital expansion at Scripps Encinitas

New facility to more than double emergency department size, boost inpatient beds by 43%.

| May 1, 2012

Construction is underway on MLK ambulatory care center in L.A.

Featuring a variety of sustainable features, the new facility is designed to achieve LEED Gold Certification.

| Apr 27, 2012

GreenExpo365.com to offer webinars on EPA’s WaterSense Program

Architects and builders interested in developing water-efficient buildings invited to attend free sessions featuring experts discussing water-efficient building practices.

| Apr 25, 2012

McCarthy introduces high school students to a career in construction

High school students from the ACE Mentoring Program tour the new CHOC Children’s Patient Tower in Orange, Calif.

| Apr 20, 2012

McCarthy completes Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital Replacement Facility

The new hospital’s architectural design combines traditional Santa Barbara Spanish colonial architecture with 21st century medical conveniences highlighted by a therapeutic and sustainable atmosphere.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021