flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

A healthcare project in Wisconsin benefits from including MEP subs in early design discussions

Building Team

A healthcare project in Wisconsin benefits from including MEP subs in early design discussions

Prefabrication played a major role in quickening construction.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | August 21, 2020

Advocate Aurora's newest Ambulatory Health Center cut a month off of its construction thanks to integrated project delivery that included subs, which is still a rarity in nonresidential building.  Images: John Magnoski

Trade partners are still the odd men out during the early stages of many projects, which can make conflicts, change orders, and delays during construction more likely.

To avoid potential snafus on its new Ambulatory Health Center in Greenfield, Wis., Advocate Aurora Health and the real estate developer Cobalt Partners formed an integrated project team with the general contractor CG Schmidt, the national design firm HGA Architects and Engineers, the mechanical contractor J.F. Ahern, and the commercial electrician Staff Electric, the latter two under a Trade Management Partners (TMP) agreement.

“Advocate Aurora Health is leading the industry in integrated project delivery,” says Cory Powers, CPD, Principal and Project Manager for HGA’s energy and infrastructure group.

TMP exemplifies collaboration. Through this arrangement, skilled contractors and supplies can engage early in the project and its design process, which helps reduce redundancies, address challenges that relate to cost and constructability, and come up with more efficient solutions.

The client’s key goal for this five-story 146,200-sf project, located in the 40-acre 84South mixed-use development, was speed to market so it could start seeing patients as soon as possible. That objective led the team to focus on using Lean Construction Methods to accelerate the project’s schedule.

PUSHING THE ENVELOPE ON PREFAB

Two-fifths of the work within 80 MEP racks were prefabricated.

 

To this end, the project pushed the limits of prefabrication through the use of 80 multi-trade prefab MEP racks that included long sections of duct work in the corridors.

Forty percent of the above-ceiling MEP work was prefabricated off-site. The construction was completed in 18 months, which gave the community local access to healthcare one month earlier compared to a traditional delivery method. Zero percent rework was achieved versus 15% rework in traditional delivery methods. And there were no injuries building and installing the MEP racks.

The team members worked in tandem from a single 3D BIM model, eliminating miscommunication and the need for re-drawings. And to reduce the risk of design errors, the team relied on state-of-the-art fabrication software, with each component barcoded and shipped to the jobsite along with an installation plan.

Using their mobile devices, workers scanned the barcodes to verify the location for each installation. Once on site and verified, the prefabricated racks were lifted to each floor to be connected and attached, a task completed within an hour of each delivery.

Powers of HGA says that prefabrication emerged as a solution during the team’s early design discussions. And the building’s systems “were laid out to be modular.” Powers adds that prefab is playing an even more prominent role in the design and construction of Advocate Aurora Health’s next two hospitals that will include bathrooms and exam rooms assembled off site.

The completed Ambulatory Health Center, which opened August 5, is valued at $55.5 million. The building is the central location for Advocate Aurora Children’s Health services that include pediatric cardiology, urology, allergy, dermatology, ENT, neuropsychology, and radiology. It has eight surgical suites, two pain management procedure rooms, four GI suites and two outpatient interventional radiology suites that are the first of their kind in Wisconsin.

With the Health Center’s recent opening, Advocate Aurora Children’s Health can offer more comprehensive pediatric services to the area. The facility also houses Advocate Aurora’s Sports Health services, along with a pediatric sports health gym and classroom space. This space brings increased availability for outpatient orthopedic surgery to patients.

The Health Center is home to midwifery services with a variety of women’s health services provided, ranging from general health education to family planning and obstetric care. Its outpatient center co-locates orthopedic exam, office, and imaging conveniently at the retail-inspired main entry, with surgical, recovery, and pain management services on floors above. 

IPD ‘THE PATH FORWARD’

“This 84South facility is actually one of the very largest outpatient ambulatory sites in all of our Wisconsin and Illinois footprint, and it will enable us to open up access for the people of the broader Greenfield community,” said Advocate Aurora Health's COO Bill Santulli, in an interview with the Milwaukee Business Journal.

When asked why integrated project delivery isn’t more common, Powers says that each AEC firm and owner is at different stages of its Lean journey. “You can’t fake experience in an IPD.” Too many firms and owners “are stuck in delivery methods that are based on fear” that they wouldn’t get the same value from an IPD contract.

“But once you go through one of these, there’s nothing else like them,” says Powers. “We can go pretty fast on our own. But it’s so much faster when you don’t have to explain everything in the field. The team comes out of the gate drumming the same beat when you’ve worked out the details months before the first dirt is broken.”

Mark Lillesand, a Vice President with CG Schmidt, thinks that integrated project design will become more prevalent as more owners become familiar with its benefits, which include “furthering our relationships with subcontractors.”

Lillesand says his firm now “prefabricates everything we can” especially now when the coronavirus has raised the stakes for jobsite safety. He adds that on other projects, CG Schmidt has included subs for drywall, steel construction, and enclosures into the early design discussions. “This is the path forward for us.”

Related Stories

| Aug 11, 2010

William D. Bast, Thornton Tomasetti, ascends to NCSEA presidency

The National Council of Structural Engineers Associations (NCSEA) announced new officers, President William “Bill” D. Bast of Thornton Tomasetti, Chicago, IL, Vice President James Malley of Degenkolb Engineers, San Francisco, CA, and Secretary Ben Nelson of Martin/Martin, Inc., Denver, CO.

| Aug 11, 2010

Swiss Farms to open drive-thru grocery

Swiss Farms, America’s drive-through grocer, will unveil its new prototype store designed by retail design and branding firm, Chute Gerdeman Retail. The new store, in Ridley Township, Pa., features a new brand identity, an eye-catching barn motif and 21st century touches, including LED displays that tie merchandise offerings to the weather forecast.

| Aug 11, 2010

Indie Energy's geothermal technology earns U.S. Department of Energy funding

Indie Energy Systems Company, LLC announced today that it has been awarded funding by the U.S. Department of Energy for the continued development of the Company's smart geothermal technologies for commercial and public buildings. The $2.45 million grant will contribute to an innovative geothermal conversion of the Local 150 International Union of Operating Engineers office campus in Countryside, Illinois.

| Aug 11, 2010

IFMA names Tony Keane President and CEO

The International Facility Management Association is pleased to announce the appointment of Anthony “Tony” J. Keane, CAE, as the association’s new president and CEO. Keane’s first day will be Jan. 18, 2010. His appointment coincides with the announced retirement of David J. Brady, current IFMA president and CEO, at the end of February 2010.

| Aug 11, 2010

International Code Council elects officers, directors

Members of the International Code Council elected Clark County (Nevada) Director of Development Services Ron Lynn as President, Decatur (Alabama) Building Director Jimmy Brothers as Vice President and Chesterfield County (Virginia) Building Official Bill Dupler as Secretary/Treasurer. Adolf Zubia, Las Cruces (New Mexico) Fire Chief, will serve as Immediate Past President.

| Aug 11, 2010

50% increase in green building programs since 2007

In the wake of an extended global economic slump, local communities are pushing ahead and expanding their green building programs. More than one in five U.S. cities with populations greater than 50,000 surveyed by the American Institute of Architects (AIA) report having a policy to promote green buildings, accounting for more than 53 million people.

| Aug 11, 2010

Burwell Architects, Ziegler Cooper Architects announce merger

Ziegler Cooper Architects is pleased to announce that Burwell Architects has merged into the Corporate Interior Studio of Ziegler Cooper Architects. We believe the new relationship will enhance and expand the services we can provide to our clients.

| Aug 11, 2010

KlingStubbins and Tocci awarded GSA contract for nationwide BIM services

KlingStubbins and Tocci Building Corporation announced they have been selected as a prime contractor team to participate in a $30M, five-year contract to provide Building Information Modeling (BIM) Services for the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA).

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




Giants 400

Top 75 Engineering Firms for 2023

Kimley-Horn, WSP, Tetra Tech, Langan, and IMEG head the rankings of the nation's largest engineering firms for nonresidential buildings and multifamily buildings work, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report.

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