flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Florida’s first freestanding academic medical behavioral health hospital breaks ground in Tampa Bay

Healthcare Facilities

Florida’s first freestanding academic medical behavioral health hospital breaks ground in Tampa Bay

The Tampa General Health Behavioral Health Hospital will feature units dedicated to behavioral health issues that are compounded by other medical conditions.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | September 13, 2023
The Tampa General Health Behavioral Health Hospital, JE Dunn, Stengel Hill Architecture
The Tampa General Health Behavioral Health Hospital, which is expected to open in late 2024, is planned to be approximately 83,000 sf with 96 to 120 inpatient beds, and will feature dedicated units for treating patients with behavioral health issues compounded by other medical conditions. Rendering courtesy Stengel Hill Architecture

Construction kicked off recently on the Tampa General Health Behavioral Health Hospital, Florida’s first freestanding academic medical behavioral health hospital. The joint venture partnership between Tampa General (a 1,040-bed facility) and Lifepoint Behavioral Health will provide a full range of inpatient and outpatient care in specialized units for pediatrics, adolescents, adults, and geriatrics, and fills a glaring medical need in the area.

The four-story, 83,000-sf hospital will accommodate 96 to 120 inpatient beds. Services for patients with behavioral health issues that are compounded by other medical conditions will be provided in dedicated units. 

The hospital will have close ties with Tampa General’s nationally recognized Neuroscience Institute, which provides a wide range of care to patients with neurological disorders. Medical students and resident physicians will receive training from faculty affiliated with University of South Florida (USF) Health Morsani College of Medicine.

“This new hospital will help raise the level of mental health care across the Tampa Bay area,” says Glenn Currier, MD, professor, and chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience in the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine. “A facility like this, dedicated to patients with behavioral and mental health conditions, especially those experiencing acute crises or complex conditions, will be an incredible asset. This specialized hospital will also ease the burden on area emergency rooms, which take in the bulk of psychiatric emergencies but have few options for the inpatient care that is so critical for successful management of many behavioral and mental health conditions.”

The conditions that will be treated at the facility are complex, but the structural concept is straightforward—a simple concrete foundation with a steel structure. The exterior will be composed of exterior insulation finishing system (EIFS), masonry, metal wall panels, and large curtainwall window systems spanning multiple floors. Materials and colors will complement Tampa General Hospital’s existing network of buildings on the campus and throughout the city. A thin brick/masonry veneer engineered system (MVES) will be installed using pre-fabricated wall panels.

Located in downtown Tampa, adjacent to a new Tampa General Rehabilitation Hospital, TGH Behavioral Health Hospital will bolster Tampa’s burgeoning medical district. The facility is expected to open in late 2024.

The facility was made possible, in part, by funding from the state of Florida to address the state's growing mental health crisis. This past legislative session, Senator Jay Collins and Representative Lawrence McClure secured $10 million in the state budget to support the construction of the TGH Behavioral Health Hospital, according to TGH.

Owner and/or developer: Tampa General Hospital
Design architect: Stengel Hill Architecture
Architect of record: Stengel Hill Architecture
MEP engineer: CMTA, Inc.
Structural engineer: Skyhook Structural Engineering
General contractor/construction manager: JE Dunn Construction

Related Stories

Healthcare Facilities | Apr 2, 2017

Comfort and durability were central to the design and expansion of a homeless clinic in Houston

For this adaptive reuse of an old union hall, the Building Team made the best of tight quarters. 

Healthcare Facilities | Mar 31, 2017

The cost of activating a new facility

Understanding the costs specifically related to activation is one of the keys to successfully occupying the new space you’ve worked so hard to create.

Sponsored | Healthcare Facilities | Mar 29, 2017

Using Better Light for Better Healthcare

Proper lighting can improve staff productivity, patient healing, and the use of space in healthcare facilities

Healthcare Facilities | Mar 29, 2017

Obamacare to Republicare: Making sense of the chaos in healthcare

With a long road of political and financial uncertainty ahead for the healthcare sector, what does this mean for the nonresidential construction industry’s third-largest sector?

Healthcare Facilities | Mar 24, 2017

5 insights for designing a human-centered pediatric experience

Pediatric experience design must evolve beyond the common mantra of “make it fun” or “make it look kid-friendly.”

Healthcare Facilities | Mar 3, 2017

CBRE: Developing a total project budget for a healthcare capital project

Successfully developing a complete and well thought out Total Project Budget is perhaps the most important task you’ll perform in the initial phase of your project.

Healthcare Facilities | Feb 26, 2017

A Georgia Tech white paper examines the pros and cons of different delivery systems for ICUs

It concludes that a ceiling-mounted beam system is best suited to provide critical care settings with easier access to patients, gases, and equipment.

Healthcare Facilities | Feb 24, 2017

The transformation of outpatient healthcare design

Higher costs and low occupancy rates have forced healthcare facilities to rethink how healthcare is delivered in their community.

Healthcare Facilities | Feb 7, 2017

Microhospitals: Healthcare's newest patient access point

Microhospitals are acute care facilities that are smaller than the typical acute care hospital. They leave complex surgeries to the big guys, but are larger and provide more comprehensive services than the typical urgent care or outpatient center.

Healthcare Facilities | Feb 6, 2017

NYC cancer hospital rises to the occasion

A recent analysis of patient volumes showed that Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center would run out of space for new construction at its Upper East Side campus in Manhattan in just a few years.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


Great Solutions

41 Great Solutions for architects, engineers, and contractors

AI ChatBots, ambient computing, floating MRIs, low-carbon cement, sunshine on demand, next-generation top-down construction. These and 35 other innovations make up our 2024 Great Solutions Report, which highlights fresh ideas and innovations from leading architecture, engineering, and construction firms.



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