flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

3 important trends in hospital design that Healthcare Giants are watching closely

3 important trends in hospital design that Healthcare Giants are watching closely

BD+C’s Giants 300 reveals top AEC firms in the healthcare sector.


By By Robert Cassidy | July 20, 2012
OR suite in the 465-bed Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center. Phase 2 is
OR suite in the 465-bed Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center. Phase 2 is under construction. Building Team: SmithGroupJJ
This article first appeared in the July 2012 issue of BD+C.

The healthcare sector faces grave financial uncertainties, even with the June 28 Supreme Court decision upholding the Affordable Care Act. To help us sort out the factors impacting this lucrative segment, we turned to Philip Tobey, a Fellow of both the AIA and the American College of Healthcare Architects and Senior Vice President with SmithGroupJJR.

“Health industry providers legitimately expect significant efficiencies and lower costs for design and construction services, to go along with the economies that they themselves face with tighter and value-based reimbursement terms under health reform,” says Tobey, a member of Building Design+Construction’s Editorial Board.

In other words, AEC firms are going to have to share some of their healthcare clients’ pain. The drive for greater operational efficiency and lower cost in healthcare will be unrelenting, with bundled payments and shared savings models in lieu of traditional fee-for-service reimbursement forcing healthcare providers to eliminate wasteful practices.

Tobey sees three major trends emerging: 1) growing emphasis on ambulatory care, 2) medical systems integration, and 3) the “bundling/unbundling” of services.

SCROLL DOWN FOR GIANTS 300 TOP 25 AEC HEALTHCARE FIRM RANKINGS


1. PUSHING AMBULATORY CARE FACILITIES OUT

“The trend to push services out of the hospital into ambulatory settings will only intensify,” says Tobey. He notes, however, that there will be an “overwhelming need” to expand the front end of delivery—primary care, urgent care, and emergency departments—and to rationalize procedural and imaging resource capacity. At the same time, freestanding surgery and imaging centers may not be as prevalent in the future, and may need to be consolidated into larger hospital centers.

“Hospitals are not going away,” says Tobey, even though inpatient volumes are predicted to fall 5%, vs. 30% growth in outpatient volume. The sheer increased volume of patients, especially as baby boomers age, will inevitably drive up acute-care admissions. In the face of these seemingly countervailing trends, says Tobey, “The need to renovate outdated or obsolete facilities will be a strong driver in the healthcare business.”

2. INTEGRATING MEDICAL SYSTEMS MORE TIGHTLY

Tobey says the need for greater efficiency and ever-higher quality of care are not new goals for medical care or medical design, but hospital systems are being encouraged further by healthcare reform to streamline processes, with more mergers, acquisitions, and hospital-physician staff integrations on the horizon. “The industry’s even been talking about including services like long-term care and home care into this integrated approach,” he says.

Although there will always be a need for acute-care hospitals, Tobey sees a possible shift toward more community-based portals. As health systems continue to integrate, they will rely more and more on treatment venues outside the hospital to provide patients with coordinated preventive care and treatment for chronic conditions.

The IT component of hospital systems is already a natural for systems integration. “Providing the right information where it’s needed is essential for clinical care,” says Tobey, who foresees greater implementation of electronic medical records.

Are hospitals ready for lean?


“Everybody’s talking about it, but many hospital owners are wary of taking on lean,” says SmithGroupJJR’s Phil Tobey, FAIA, FACHA, whose firm is on the team for Sutter Health’s California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco, the largest lean project in the U.S. “You have Sutter, which is totally lean, then you have clients who tell us not even to mention the word,” he says. “Others are applying the basic principles of lean construction without carrying the heavy weight of all that lean entails.”

Applying Lean/Six Sigma principles to healthcare, says Jeffrey C. Stouffer, AIA, a Principal with HKS, would result in “measurable outcomes and even risk sharing as part of the design and construction process” by eliminating unnecessary waste in construction and operations and increasing staff efficiency and safety, while reducing energy and staff costs for the hospital.

3. UNBUNDLING/BUNDLING OF HEALTHCARE SERVICES

Healthcare providers are “decanting” non-core functions—services like pharmacy, lab support, materials handling, and environmental management—from the mother ship into cheaper B-occupancy buildings. “Anything soft, anything that’s not high-tech, is being taken out,” says Tobey. “That’s the unbundling.”

However, once the unbundling of less-intense services has been accomplished, says Tobey, some hospital systems are opting to bundle the remaining hospital space, by placing beds back on top of the structure’s base diagnostic and support block, instead of having the traditional diagnostic/support chassis with attached nursing wings.

“You unbundle and decant the support services, then take the remaining high-intensity hospital base and put the beds on top,” says Tobey. A recent study for a 100-bed community hospital found that following such a scheme would result in 39% savings in construction costs per bed. +

 

TOP 25 HEALTHCARE SECTOR ARCHITECTURE FIRMS

Rank Company 2011 Healthcare Revenue ($)
1 HDR Architecture 205,200,000
2 HKS 124,736,964
3 Perkins+Will 122,895,589
4 Cannon Design 121,000,000
5 NBBJ 116,401,000
6 HOK 102,695,248
7 SmithGroupJJR 74,600,000
8 RTKL Associates 68,421,405
9 Perkins Eastman 63,700,000
10 Hammel, Green and Abrahamson 61,900,000
11 ZGF Architects 54,338,355
12 Heery International 48,583,000
13 HMC Architects 42,715,899
14 PageSoutherlandPage 38,670,000
15 IBI Group 37,349,554
16 Skidmore, Owings & Merrill 33,950,000
17 FKP Architects 33,947,200
18 Gresham, Smith and Partners 32,876,981
19 FreemanWhite 28,500,000
20 RBB Architects 28,500,000
21 LEO A DALY 26,900,325
22 BSA LifeStructures 26,323,759
23 EwingCole 24,000,000
24 KMD Architects 20,161,678
25 Ennead Architects 19,875,000

 

TOP 25 HEALTHCARE SECTOR ENGINEERING FIRMS

Rank Company 2011 Healthcare Revenue ($)
1 AECOM Technology Corp. 314,000,000
2 Stantec 109,980,000
3 URS Corp. 41,298,918
4 Smith Seckman Reid 38,300,000
5 Jacobs 32,950,000
6 Parsons Brinckerhoff 30,600,000
7 KPFF Consulting Engineers 28,000,000
8 TTG|TMAD TAYLOR & GAINES 27,677,900
9 Mazzetti Nash Lipsey Burch 24,988,296
10 Degenkolb Engineers 22,454,591
11 Allen & Shariff 21,577,769
12 Bard, Rao + Athanas Consulting Engineers 18,000,000
13 ccrd partners 17,100,000
14 Atkins North America 16,173,240
15 AKF Group 15,200,000
16 KJWW Engineering Consultants 14,607,369
17 Syska Hennessy Group 14,462,238
18 Zak Companies 13,882,705
19 TLC Engineering for Architecture 13,874,283
20 Dewberry 10,613,564
21 Thornton Tomasetti 9,860,000
22 Sparling 9,658,825
23 Walter P Moore 7,718,326
24 M/E Engineering 7,700,000
25 Rutherford & Chekene 7,650,000

 

TOP 25 HEALTHCARE SECTOR CONSTRUCTION FIRMS

Rank Company 2011 Healthcare Revenue ($)
1 Turner Corporation, The 1,807,050,000
2 McCarthy Holdings 1,231,000,000
3 Gilbane Building Co. 1,091,777,000
4 Clark Group 1,067,411,678
5 PCL Construction Enterprises 869,130,091
6 Brasfield & Gorrie 833,522,003
7 Skanska USA 724,418,042
8 JE Dunn Construction 636,206,095
9 Robins & Morton 599,073,000
10 DPR Construction 588,199,172
11 Whiting-Turner Contracting Co., The 464,779,240
12 Mortenson 455,620,000
13 Lend Lease 434,626,482
14 Hensel Phelps Construction 425,760,000
15 Suffolk Construction 420,343,563
16 Pepper Construction Group 415,064,000
17 Tutor Perini Corp. 409,583,000
18 Balfour Beatty US 389,253,907
19 Hunt Construction Group 369,500,000
20 Hoar Construction 313,937,000
21 Flintco 291,400,000
22 Layton Construction 287,300,000
23 HBE Corp. 279,200,000
24 Power Construction 275,000,000
25 Swinerton 274,627,440

Related Stories

Laboratories | Nov 18, 2021

Tapping into the life sciences building boom

Paul Ferro of Form4 Architecture discusses how developers are pivoting to the life sciences sector, and what that means for construction and adaptive reuse.

2021 Building Team Awards | Nov 17, 2021

Caltech's new neuroscience building unites scientists, engineers to master the human brain

The Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Institute for Neuroscience at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena wins a Gold Award in BD+C's 2021 Building Team Awards.

K-12 Schools | Nov 10, 2021

K-12 school design innovation: 'Learning Everywhere' and the mobile classroom

Last September, AIA San Francisco awarded the Professional Category in its 2021 Future Classroom Competition to a five-person team from Culver City, Calif.-based Berliner Architects. The firm was selected for its “Learning Everywhere” idea that features a mobile strategy for education at school, home, on field trips, and in transit. BD+C's John Caulfield discuss that concept with Richard Berliner, AIA, Principal, Berliner Architects.

Architects | Nov 9, 2021

Download BD+C’s 2021 Design Innovation Report

AEC and development firms share where new ideas come from, and what makes them click.

Architects | Nov 9, 2021

Download BD+C’s 10 Predictions for the Construction Industry in 2022

Our prognostications focus on how AEC firms will streamline and modernize their projects and operations.

Architects | Nov 9, 2021

Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects announces renaming

Founded by Cesar Pelli with partners Fred Clarke and Diana Balmori in 1977, the firm began its legacy as Cesar Pelli & Associates at its first office in New Haven, Connecticut.

Architects | Nov 2, 2021

What rugby can teach us about designing the workspace of the future

Two veteran workplace designers offer a sports-based analogy for designing agile spaces to meet the needs of an evolving workforce.

Adaptive Reuse | Nov 1, 2021

CallisonRTKL explores converting decommissioned cruise ships for housing

The rapid increase in cruise ship decommissioning during the last 18 months has created a unique opportunity to innovate and adapt these large ships.

Sustainability | Oct 28, 2021

Reducing embodied carbon in construction, with sustainability leader Sarah King

Sustainability leader Sarah King explains how developers and contractors can use the new EC3 software tool to reduce embodied carbon in their buildings.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


Resiliency

Austin area evacuation center will double as events venue

A new 45,000 sf FEMA-operated evacuation shelter in the Greater Austin metropolitan area will begin construction this fall. The center will be available to house people in the event of a disaster such as a major hurricane and double as an events venue when not needed for emergency shelter.



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