The University of Chicago Medicine (UChicago Medicine) is building Chicago’s first freestanding cancer center with inpatient and outpatient services. Aiming to bridge longstanding health disparities on Chicago’s South Side, the $815 million project will consolidate care and about 200 team members currently spread across at least five buildings.
The new facility, which broke ground in September, is expected to open to patients in spring 2027.
Designed by CannonDesign in collaboration with Blue Cottage of CannonDesign and Yazdani Studio, the center will serve both patient and academic needs by supporting the research, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of cancer. It will have a capacity for up to 200,000 outpatient visits and 5,000 inpatient admissions per year.
The 575,000-sf, seven-story building, with room for expansion, will offer 80 inpatient beds (64 medical-surgical beds and a 16-bed ICU), 90 consultation and outpatient exam rooms, and an urgent care clinic that protects immunocompromised cancer patients from extended emergency room visits. To promote patient comfort and privacy, private infusion bays will be grouped by cancer type.
To improve the patient experience, the new facility will provide support services for patients and their families—including lifestyle classes, nutrition education, survivor support, music therapy, fitness classes, and a retail store selling cancer-specific products such as wigs or clothing with openings for ports. Family-friendly features also will include showers and on-site laundry machines, inpatient family dining areas, and larger consultation rooms for patients who attend appointments with loved ones.
In addition to a ground floor that serves both the University of Chicago campus and the surrounding neighborhood, amenities include a café, wellness and meeting spaces, public art, educational opportunities, and a publicly accessible garden.
The project will create more than 500 construction jobs and will give at least 41% of $435 million in construction contracts to minority- and women-owned firms.
On the Building Team:
Owner: University of Chicago Medicine (UChicago Medicine)
Design architect and architect of record: CannonDesign
MEP engineer: Affiliated Engineers with RTM Engineers
Structural engineer: Thornton Tomasetti
Contractor: Turner Construction
Related Stories
Healthcare Facilities | Oct 29, 2018
Outpatient clinics bring the VA closer to injured veterans
The Department of Veterans Affairs is making efforts to improve its construction management and align its design guidelines to industry standards.
Healthcare Facilities | Oct 22, 2018
WSP-HKS JV signs deal for U.S. Navy construction work
The contract is not exclusive to the two firms, but it lets NAVFAC assign certain projects to them.
Healthcare Facilities | Oct 12, 2018
N.Y. builder pushes to get military trauma centers up and running quicker
To date, seven NICoE Spirit satellite centers have been built on the grounds of Fort Belvoir in Virginia, Camp Lejeune and Fort Bragg in North Carolina, Fort Campbell in Kentucky, Fort Hood in Texas, Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington, and Camp Pendleton in California.
Healthcare Facilities | Sep 7, 2018
Medical office construction isn’t keeping pace with the aging of America
A new Transwestern report suggests a “rethinking” of healthcare delivery approaches that lean heavier on technology.
Engineers | Aug 22, 2018
An electrical engineer’s take on designing successful pharmaceutical lab space
Patrick Licklider, PE, CEM, GGP, LEED AP BD+C, an electrical engineer in Clark Nexsen’s Science + technology practice, shares his perspective on what it takes to successfully design laboratory and manufacturing environments for the fast-changing pharmaceutical and biotech industry.
Healthcare Facilities | Aug 3, 2018
Seismic deadlines approaching for healthcare companies
California hospitals can save money with a holistic approach to retrofit issues.
Healthcare Facilities | Jul 30, 2018
Best in healthcare design 2018: Seven projects win AIA/AAH Healthcare Design Awards
The Steven Holl-designed Maggie’s Centre Barts cancer treatment facility in London highlights the honorees of the AIA Academy of Architecture for Health 2018 Healthcare Design Awards.
Healthcare Facilities | Jul 26, 2018
Healthcare market trends 2018: Health systems get leaner, more resilient
Hospitals set their sights on improving patient convenience and operational efficiency.
Healthcare Facilities | Jul 11, 2018
5 ways design is transforming behavioral healthcare
Circadian lighting, calming materials, and transparency are helping to normalize the patient experience in behavioral healthcare.
Healthcare Facilities | Jul 10, 2018
HGA designs acute care hospital for MetroHealth in Cleveland
The facility’s master plan creates a ‘hospital in a park.’