flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

A new mental health center in Miami offers alternatives to incarceration

Healthcare Facilities

A new mental health center in Miami offers alternatives to incarceration

The seven-story building has 208 beds.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | January 16, 2024
The Miami Center for Mental Health and Recovery includes a courtroom as part of its intake and evaluation process.
The recently completed Miami Center for Mental Health and Recovery helps divert people with serious mental illness toward care and away from detention. Images: SBLM Architects

Among the 25 cities in the U.S. with the largest homeless populations, the only city in Florida is Miami, with roughly 3,700 homeless, or 8.1 people per 1,000, according to U.S. News and World Report. Local agencies and programs such as Camillus House’s Lazarus Project and the Miami Permanent Supportive Housing Program target individuals suffering from mental illness that experts identify as one of the root causes of homelessness.

A team that included SBLM Architects recently completed the renovation and conversion of a vacant seven-story, 180,000-sf building—which had previously served as a mental health evaluation and treatment center—into the Miami Center for Mental Health and Recovery, whose goal is to divert individuals with serious mental problems from the criminal justice system to a facility where they can receive proper care and treatment, and possibly transition into more stable housing.

The Miami Center is a response to the Baker Act, a Florida law passed in 1971 that enables families and loved ones to provide emergency mental health services and temporary detention for people who are impaired because of their mental illness, and who are unable to determine their needs for treatment.

The revamped, 208-bed Miami Center, which in late December received its Temporary Certificate of Occupancy, is unique in that its first floor, where detainees are processed and evaluated, includes a Hearing Room with judge and magistrate chambers for related hearings and legal proceedings.

SBLM’s design, in fact, was “conceived” by Judge Steven Leifman, Associate Administrative Judge in the criminal division of Florida’s 11th Circuit Court. “The judge has been the driving force behind this,” confirms Jim Cohen, a Vice President with Miami-based SBLM Architects, who spoke with BD+C yesterday. Judge Leifman was also instrumental is raising funds for this Center.

Bureaucratic snags delay development

Cohen recounts that the “mental health diversion” concept emerged in 2010 after an expose in the mid 2000s revealed that Miami-Dade County's Correctional Department wasn’t equipped to provide the care needed by mentally ill inmates.

At first, the plan was to use only a couple of floors in the building, which was built in 1980. That morphed into a design-build project that at one point had Johnson Controls offering to pay for the entire renovation if its systems were installed. (The county declined that offer.)

The county hired SBLM in 2015, and Cohen says now that the building provided the “backbone and space to realize the judge’s vision.” The building team on this $52 million renovation project included Thornton Construction Company (GC), Bliss & Nyitray (SE) TWR Engineers (MEP), and TLC Engineering for Architecture (technology).

A continuum of care

The upper floors offer housing
The upper floors of the Miami Center for Mental Health and Recovery offer short- and longterm housing.

After the intake and evaluation processes, an individual is moved into Crisis Stabilization Unit on the second floor with 16 beds, outpatient clinics, 15 offices for support services, and a conference center for professional and educational training (including law enforcement training specifically for this population). The second floor also has a “respite area” for persons who don’t meet the Center’s crisis criteria but have nowhere else to go.

There’s a secure wing on the second floor for residents that includes a gym, a multipurpose day room, visitation areas, and access to a 33,000-sf outdoor recreation space with landscaping, seating, a walking path, and basketball courts.

Mechanical equipment is on the third floor, which also serves as a physical and acoustical buffer from the resident sleeping areas on floors four through six. (The seventh floor hasn’t been built out yet.) Each resident floor has six to eight sleep pods that allow patient care to be segmented. A maximum of five beds per resident floor may be assigned to that floor’s private bathroom.

Resident floors have dedicated support areas for pharmacies, exam rooms, professional therapy offices, laundries, and dining. As a resident’s condition stabilizes, there can be relocations to higher floors that provide independent living opportunities. As such, Miami Center claims to be the first of its kind in the country that offers a continuum of healthcare for the mentally ill that includes the prospect of reintegrating into society.

Treatment instead of detention

The custodial component, says Cohen, can last up to six months. If the patient shows improvement, he or she is eligible for longer-term houisng on floors five and six. At that stage, a patient can opt to leave the program.

The opening of the Miami Center, which will cost $30 million per year to run, is projected to save Miami-Dade County $100,000 per person annually by providing treatment programs to mentally ill people who otherwise would be held for extended periods in county detention facilities. Cohen says he’s been contacted by the city of Seattle about Miami-Dade’s diversion efforts, and notes that Judge Leifman has toured the facility with representatives from other cities.

Cohen adds that the first floor of the building includes a commercial kitchen that, once operational, could provide patients with training applicable to the food service industry.

Related Stories

| Jan 31, 2011

CISCA releases White Paper on Acoustics in Healthcare Environments

The Ceilings & Interior Systems Construction Association (CISCA) has released an extensive white paper “Acoustics in Healthcare Environments” for architects, interior designers, and other design professionals who work to improve healthcare settings for all users. This white paper serves as a comprehensive introduction to the acoustical issues commonly confronted on healthcare projects and howbest to address those.

| Jan 27, 2011

Perkins Eastman's report on senior housing signals a changing market

Top international design and architecture firm Perkins Eastman is pleased to announce that the Perkins Eastman Research Collaborative recently completed the “Design for Aging Review 10 Insights and Innovations: The State of Senior Housing” study for the American Institute of Architects (AIA). The results of the comprehensive study reflect the changing demands and emerging concepts that are re-shaping today’s senior living industry.

| Jan 21, 2011

Harlem facility combines social services with retail, office space

Harlem is one of the first neighborhoods in New York City to combine retail with assisted living. The six-story, 50,000-sf building provides assisted living for residents with disabilities and a nonprofit group offering services to minority groups, plus retail and office space.

| Jan 21, 2011

Research center built for interdisciplinary cooperation

The Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children’s Hospital, in Houston, the first basic research institute for childhood neurological diseases, is a 13-story twisting tower in the center of the hospital campus.

| Jan 19, 2011

Biomedical research center in Texas to foster scientific collaboration

The new Health and Biomedical Sciences Center at the University of Houston will facilitate interaction between scientists in a 167,000-sf, six-story research facility. The center will bring together researchers from many of the school’s departments to collaborate on interdisciplinary projects. The facility also will feature an ambulatory surgery center for the College of Optometry, the first of its kind for an optometry school. Boston-based firms Shepley Bulfinch and Bailey Architects designed the project.

| Jan 19, 2011

New Fort Hood hospital will replace aging medical center

The Army Corps of Engineers selected London-based Balfour Beatty and St. Louis-based McCarthy to provide design-build services for the Fort Hood Replacement Hospital in Texas, a $503 million, 944,000-sf complex partially funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The firm plans to use BIM for the project, which will include outpatient clinics, an ambulance garage, a central utility plant, and three parking structures. Texas firms HKS Architects and Wingler & Sharp will participate as design partners. The project seeks LEED Gold.

| Jan 10, 2011

Michael J. Alter, president of The Alter Group: ‘There’s a significant pent-up demand for projects’

Michael J. Alter, president of The Alter Group, a national corporate real estate development firm headquartered in Skokie, Ill., on the growth of urban centers, project financing, and what clients are saying about sustainability.

| Dec 17, 2010

ARRA-funded Navy hospital aims for LEED Gold

The team of Clark/McCarthy, HKS Architects, and Wingler & Sharp are collaborating on the design of a new naval hospital at Camp Pendleton in Southern California. The $451 million project is the largest so far awarded by the U.S. Navy under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The 500,000-sf, 67-bed hospital, to be located on a 70-acre site, will include facilities for emergency and primary care, specialty care clinics, surgery, and intensive care. The Building Team is targeting LEED Gold.

| Dec 17, 2010

Arizona outpatient cancer center to light a ‘lantern of hope’

Construction of the Banner MD Anderson Cancer Center in Gilbert, Ariz., is under way. Located on the Banner Gateway Medical Center campus near Phoenix, the three-story, 131,000-sf outpatient facility will house radiation oncology, outpatient imaging, multi-specialty clinics, infusion therapy, and various support services. Cannon Design incorporated a signature architectural feature called the “lantern of hope” for the $90 million facility.

| Oct 18, 2010

World’s first zero-carbon city on track in Abu Dhabi

Masdar City, the world’s only zero-carbon city, is on track to be built in Abu Dhabi, with completion expected as early as 2020. Foster + Partners developed the $22 billion city’s master plan, with Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture, Aedas, and Lava Architects designing buildings for the project’s first phase, which is on track to be ready for occupancy by 2015.

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