flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

New VA care center showcases the agency’s P3 approach to financing healthcare facilities

Healthcare Facilities

New VA care center showcases the agency’s P3 approach to financing healthcare facilities

Clinic programming enhances patient privacy.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | August 13, 2020

The Department of Veterans Affairs' new care center, in Omaha, Neb., offers eight primary clinics. Images: Courtesy of Leo A Daly

The 160,000-sf, three-story VA Ambulatory Care Center opened in Omaha, Neb., on August 3. This is the first of five pilot projects authorized to be built under the Communities Helping Invest through Property and Improvements Needed for Veterans Act, otherwise known as CHIP IN, which became law in 2016 and allows the cash-strapped U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to use private investments to fund construction and real estate purchases.

The Omaha facility’s $86 million price tag was defrayed by $30 million in private contributions funneled through the nonprofit Heritage Services, the project’s construction manager, which donated its services and the building to the VA. This funding mechanism created efficiencies that shortened construction time and aligned design specifications with those used in private healthcare projects.

Also see: Outpatient clinics bring the VA closer to injured veterans

The new center has the capacity to provide healthcare services to about 400 patients per day.

LEO A DALY provided the architectural, engineering, and interior design services on this project, for which McCarthy Building Companies was the GC. The Ambulatory Care Center has eight primary care clinics, including one for women vets (a first in VA’s healthcare network), and a care clinic that’s shared by orthopedics, cardiology, and other specialty medical practices.

A WALL DESIGNED TO RESEMBLE A WAVING FLAG

Alternating colors along the building's western facade symbolize the colored bars earned by miltary servicemen and women.

 

All clinics employ Patient Aligned Care Team (PACT) programming to enhance patient privacy and navigation. By centralizing clinical staff and resources, the PACT model also promotes collaboration. A new outpatient surgery center occupies the third floor, along with radiology. On the first level, a new connector building provides direct indoor access to the existing hospital and its services.

Sophisticated structural and architectural coordination created the folded glass form of the building’s “flag wall.” Against the western façade, alternating colors symbolize the “colored bars” earned by military servicemen and women for acts of gallantry and heroism. Both walls use transparent glazing to stream abundant daylighting into the interior spaces.

Also see: Veterans’ mental health needs are central to Seattle’s VA design

A sense of refuge, comfort, and reflection are reinforced by amenities that include an outdoor healing garden and commissioned artwork (some of it created by veteran-artists) installed in the facility’s public spaces.

The new Ambulatory Care Center replaces a crumbling hospital built in the 1940s and had long been on the VA’s list of replacement priorities.

Related Stories

Healthcare Facilities | May 16, 2019

ASU Health Futures Center combines a novel design and approach to learning

The trapezoidal shape of the building is an eco-friendly feature.

Healthcare Facilities | May 9, 2019

Construction of new children’s hospital addition in NW Florida had to weather several storms

Patient and staff care were primary concerns during this 25-month project, says its GC.

Healthcare Facilities | May 3, 2019

The healthcare sector is turning to drones to supplement medical services

Leo A Daly’s Miami studio envisions a drone-powered hospital that enhances resilience to natural disasters.

| Apr 26, 2019

Greenwich Hospital upgrades boilers to improve operational efficiency

Greenwich Hospital, in Greenwich, Conn., chooses new Miura boilers.

Healthcare Facilities | Apr 15, 2019

It’s official: China opens first green hospital, designed by HMC Architects

Shunde Hospital of Southern Medical University is the official pilot green hospital for development of China’s green guide for hospital design. 

Healthcare Facilities | Apr 9, 2019

How healthcare organizations can leverage design and culture's symbiotic relationship

The relationship between workplace design and company culture isn’t all that different from a tango.

Healthcare Facilities | Apr 3, 2019

Patients will actively seek out lower-cost and virtual healthcare in the future

Mortenson’s latest study finds that Millennials’ inclinations toward technological solutions are changing how care is and will be delivered.

Healthcare Facilities | Mar 29, 2019

Former grocery store becomes a cancer care center in New Jersey

Francis Cauffman Architects (FCA) designed the adaptive reuse project.

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