Last August 1, Uvalde (Texas) Memorial Hospital broke ground on a 170,000-sf, $83.5 million replacement hospital that is following a building model specifically for rural and underfunded communities, devised by this project’s general contractor Hoar Construction.
Over the past decade, Hoar’s Texas division has built or renovated more than 1.3 million sf of healthcare facilities using a preconstruction formula that helps rural healthcare providers overcome budget barriers and win over community and political support for funding on capital improvement projects.
“Rural healthcare is in crisis right now,” observes Coker Barton, Hoar Construction’s Senior Vice President of Healthcare. “We’ve seen 126 rural hospitals across the United States close since 2010. Rural healthcare is unique in that it really does take a village to get a project across the finish line, or even started for that matter. After completing our first project, we saw an opportunity to really dig in and help these healthcare providers early in the process so they could make the most of their budgets and provide that much-needed care to their local communities.”
Some recent examples where the Hoar applied its roadmap include:
•Faith Community Hospital in Jacksboro, Texas, a $28 million facility that, when it opened in September 2015, replaced a 60-year-old building that nearly closed due to bad management and unsafe conditions.
Through value engineering Hoar found $100,000 in savings that allowed this project to move forward. The hospital also did a needs assessment before going to the voters for funding, which they had been rejected previously. (To build grassroots support for a new hospital, Faith, spearheaded by its CEO Frank Beaman, boosted community engagement and education, and hired additional personnel to follow-up with patients.)
This is the first rural/sole provider hospital in the state with a geothermal water heat pump, which helps reduce operating costs.
Faith Community Hospital had to overcome community opposition to its cost.
•Mountain Lakes Medical Center, a 67,000-sf critical access hospital in Clayton, Ga., whose construction was $2 million over budget when Hoar came on board. Hoar saved this project nearly $400,000 by switching to exterior insulation and finish system (EIFS) panels, from more expensive exterior cladding made by Trespa International. Hoar also streamlined trade partners’ work to ensure faster delivery of the project, which was completed in October 2017.
Uvalde, Texas, population 16,000, is a 7.6-square-mile town about 80 miles west of San Antonio. Its current hospital—which will be torn down once the new one is ready for occupancy in September 2021—was built in 1972. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s rural development office is financing the new hospital’s construction through $58.5 million in direct funding and $16.5 million in guaranteed loans. The hospital intends to issue 40-year bonds to raise $75 million.
Finding potential financing vehicles is part of the roadmap Hoar Construction has devised for community and rural hospitals that are often at “a natural disadvantage for borrowing money.” Those vehicles can include bond financing, the Federal Housing Administration’s Section 242 Mortgage Insurance program, and USDA’s Communities Facilities loan program.
Hoar has mapped out how a project’s preplanning, preconstruction, and construction stages should move forward. For example, it says that hospitals need to “consider your ideal facility 50 years from now, cost implications, possible interruptions, and long-term growth.” It states that operational planning is “key” to completing a successful project. “Consider the relocation of equipment and transfer of staff and IT infrastructure to ensure a seamless move.”
Mountain Lakes Medical Center connects its patients with the outdoors.
Perkins and Will designed Uvalde Memorial. Hoar’s model takes into account programming and project definition, architectural design and engineering, and the development of construction contract documents. The success of this process, it says, rests on thorough and timely input from hospital personnel, and early constructability input related to the use of cost-effective building systems that balance initial cost and long-range operational expenses.
“The roadmap really champions the idea of a collaborative design review, which include great partners like Perkins and Will and even our trade partners to come up with a workable plan and meet the challenge of how we’re going to build a hospital or other healthcare facility,” says Hoar’s Barton. “This way, we can price out every process, material, and design element as the architect draws it. By having daily or weekly design meetings, we can understand what they’re drawing and what our owner is seeking in the design. If something is over budget or there’s an issue that could negatively impact the schedule, we can identify it in real time and work with the design team to find a better option.
“Essentially, we’re making a series of small corrections during the design phase, instead of wholesale rework during construction. This also helps determine the best workflow and maintain the construction schedule,” Barton says.
Hoar has found that the CM-at-Risk delivery method works best for these kinds of projects “because we can get involved early and be part of the team, which helps with the budget and schedule,” explains Barton. Understanding project expectations early allows the team to eliminate waste and produce more accurate documents and cost estimates. Hoar’s roadmap focuses specifically on MEP systems and specifications, “which are the largest driver of construction costs and can create operational issues when MEP systems are not sized appropriate[ly] for your facility.”
The new hospital in Uvalde will include 132,870 sf of institutional space, 31,872 sf of administrative space, and a 11,500-sf central utility plant. The replacement hospital will house an emergency department, physical and occupational therapy department, a 25-bed medical surgical inpatient unit, and 16 outpatient beds.
Related Stories
Healthcare Facilities | Aug 18, 2023
Psychiatric hospital to feature biophilic elements, aim for net-zero energy
A new 521,000 sf, 350-bed behavioral health hospital in Lakewood, Wash., a Tacoma suburb, will serve forensic patients who enter care through the criminal court system, freeing other areas of campus to serve civil patients. The facility at Western State Hospital, to be designed by HOK, will promote a holistic approach to rehabilitation as part of the state’s vision for transforming behavioral health.
Healthcare Facilities | Aug 10, 2023
The present and future of crisis mental health design
BWBR principal Melanie Baumhover sat down with the firm’s behavioral and mental health designers to talk about how intentional design can play a role in combatting the crisis.
Market Data | Aug 1, 2023
Nonresidential construction spending increases slightly in June
National nonresidential construction spending increased 0.1% in June, according to an Associated Builders and Contractors analysis of data published today by the U.S. Census Bureau. Spending is up 18% over the past 12 months. On a seasonally adjusted annualized basis, nonresidential spending totaled $1.07 trillion in June.
Healthcare Facilities | Aug 1, 2023
Top 10 healthcare design projects for 2023
The HKS-designed Allegheny Health Network Wexford (Pa.) Hospital and Flad Architects' Sarasota Memorial Hospital - Venice (Fla.) highlight 10 projects to win 2023 Healthcare Design Awards from the American Institute of Architects Academy of Architecture for Health.
Designers | Jul 25, 2023
The latest 'five in focus' healthcare interior design trends
HMC Architects’ Five in Focus blog series explores the latest trends, ideas, and innovations shaping the future of healthcare design.
Market Data | Jul 24, 2023
Leading economists call for 2% increase in building construction spending in 2024
Following a 19.7% surge in spending for commercial, institutional, and industrial buildings in 2023, leading construction industry economists expect spending growth to come back to earth in 2024, according to the July 2023 AIA Consensus Construction Forecast Panel.
Healthcare Facilities | Jul 19, 2023
World’s first prefab operating room with fully automated disinfection technology opens in New York
The first prefabricated operating room in the world with fully automated disinfection technology opened recently at the University of Rochester Medicine Orthopedics Surgery Center in Henrietta, N.Y. The facility, developed in a former Sears store, features a system designed by Synergy Med, called Clean Cube, that had never been applied to an operating space before. The components of the Clean Cube operating room were custom premanufactured and then shipped to the site to be assembled.
Sponsored | | Jul 12, 2023
Keyless Security for Medical Offices
Keeping patient data secure is a serious concern for medical professionals. Traditional lock-and-key systems do very little to help manage this problem, and create additional issues of their own. “Fortunately, wireless access control — a keyless alternative — eliminates the need for traditional physical keys while providing a higher level of security and centralized control,” says Cliff Brady, Salto Director of Industry Sectors Engagement, North America. Let’s explore how that works.
Healthcare Facilities | Jul 10, 2023
The latest pediatric design solutions for our tiniest patients
Pediatric design leaders Julia Jude and Kristie Alexander share several of CannonDesign's latest pediatric projects.
Healthcare Facilities | Jun 27, 2023
Convenience ranks highly when patients seek healthcare
Healthcare consumers are just as likely to factor in convenience as they do cost when deciding where to seek care and from whom, according to a new survey of 4,037 American adults about their attitudes and preferences as patients. The survey, conducted from April 19-28 by JLL, in many ways confirms the obvious: that older generations seek preventive care more often than younger generations; that insurance coverage is a primary driver for choosing a provider or hospital; and that the quality of service affects the patient experience.