flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

HGA and The Boldt Company devise a prefabricated temporary hospital to manage surge capacity during a viral crisis

Coronavirus

HGA and The Boldt Company devise a prefabricated temporary hospital to manage surge capacity during a viral crisis

A STAAT Mod system can be ready to receive patients in less than a month.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | April 10, 2020

The STAAT Mod system provides a fully functioning hospital environment for treating high-acuity patients. Images: HGA

   

In its prefabrication factory in Appleton, Wis., The Boldt Company, a national general contractor, is manufacturing modules for STAAT Mod, a prefab modular solution designed by HGA for assembling field hospitals capable of providing airborne infection isolation rooms.

STAAT is an acronym for Strategic Temporary Acuity-Adaptable Treatment. The isolation rooms are designed with enough clearance for safe bed transfers, and can accommodate equipment and a reclining chair. The system, which is expandable, includes flexible support spaces, three-bay negative pressure units, an intake module, equipment room and staff work area, clean utility and medication/nourishment spaces, staff lounges and private work areas, and the electrical/mechanical infrastructure needed for operations.

Boldt currently has seven modules in various stages of production for an unnamed customer on the East Coast. (It declined to make public that customer’s name because the contract hadn’t been finalized at presstime.)

The building team on this project includes the mechanical contractor Tweet/Garot, the electrical engineer Faith Technologies, and the medical equipment planning firm IMEG. Information about STAAT Mod, and an animated video of how this system comes together, can be viewed and downloaded here.

Kurt Spiering, a healthcare market sector leader for HGA, notes that modularization has been A factor in the healthcare arena for the past six to eight years, partly because of the industry’s construction labor shortages. “It’s been in our blood for a while.” The challenge in developing STAAT Mod, he explains, was “maintaining the quality of care using different materials, and building something within three weeks.”

Boldt started exploring prefabrication for a 274-bed acute care hospital it built—in partnership with Herrero Builders— a few years ago for Sutter Health in San Francisco. The hospital sits on a one-block lot that had virtually no drop-off area available for materials. For that project, Boldt put up a temporary factory on Treasure Island, where it produced components like water closets and drinking fountain stations.

It then had a client in Chicago, Advocate Aurora Health, for which it produced a proof-of-concept modular master plan for healthcare clinics, medical office buildings, and ambulatory facilities. “We built the prototype in our Appleton factory, and drove it around the country” to test its durability, says Dave Kievet, Boldt’s COO.

 

STAAT Mod is designed and engineered to be expandable to meet the community's needs.

 

Then, he says, “the coronavirus hit.” Boldt began contacting some of its long-standing design and building partners to figure out how to develop a modular system with negative pressurization. In that endeavor, Boldt consulted with Theda Care and Froedtert Hospital in Wisconsin.

The Boldt Company is one of the industry’s leading proponents of Integrated Lean Project Delivery to control costs, increase the speed of construction, and drive out waste. Kievet says that ILPD allowed the building team to design and develop STAAT Mod “very quickly.”

Spiering says that choices were made around two priorities: staff and patient safety, and getting good clinical outcomes. Jeff Harris, HGA’s director of engineering, adds that the building team took a “kit of parts” approach, which included choosing to use a standard 3- to 4-ton rooftop air handling unit that could service a couple of rooms that are designed with oversized ducts. The rooms that are negative pressurized draw air through HEPA filters.

Now that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is supervising the conversion of spaces like convention centers to alternate patient care facilities, HGA and Boldt views the states, which are coordinating these conversion efforts, as the primary  buyers for STAAT Mod. Since it made public information about STAAT Mod, Boldt has had conversations with at least 20 potential customers, says Stacy Robben, the firm’s Vice President of Business Development.

Kievet estimates that once an order is placed, Boldt can get the first module up and operational within 14 to 17 days, and complete an entire order within 20 to 28 days. “The target is to get the completion down to 14 days,” he says. The price of the system will vary by the number of modules used. HGA|Boldt’s pricing sheet states that a two-room airborne isolation room would cost $335,000. A three-bed open bay negative pressure modular $317,000. So a two-tier system with 32 isolation rooms and all the other bells and whistles would run about $8.3 million.

This illustration shows the system's air handling and filtration mechanics.

 

Boldt sees three different practical applications for STAAT Mod: as supplemental interior isolation rooms within an existing system of care; as a modular system that’s connected to an existing hospital’s infrastructure, built (theoretically) on that facility’s parking lot; and as a self-sufficient temporary hospital with infrastructure.

STAAT Mod could be used to treat a hospital’s most severe cases, freeing up hospital and clinic beds for procedures like elective surgeries, which is where many healthcare systems derive a substantial portion of their revenues. Kievet says it’s conceivable that modules could be disassembled and reassembled as needed, or built on foundations for more permanent use.

Boldt has formed alliances with several other prefabrication firms in different parts of the country, including Southland Industries, to expand its capacity to provide STAAT Mod systems across the U.S. Boldt has 14 offices in the U.S., and healthcare is one of nine industry sectors it serves.

 

 

Related Stories

Coronavirus | Aug 28, 2020

7 must reads for the AEC industry today: August 28, 2020

Hotel occupancy likely to dip by 29%, and pandemic helps cannabis industry gain firmer footing.

Coronavirus | Aug 27, 2020

8 must reads for the AEC industry today: August 27, 2020

Extended-stay hotels are the lodging sector's safest bet, and industrial real estate faces short-term decline.

Coronavirus | Aug 25, 2020

Co-living firm Common issues RFP for the future home office and work hub

Common, the U.S.’s largest co-living company, recently released an RFP for a “Remote Work Hub” to blend work and life from the ground up.

Coronavirus | Aug 25, 2020

Video: 5 building sectors to watch amid COVID-19

RCLCO's Brad Hunter reveals the winners and non-winners of the U.S. real estate market during the coronavirus pandemic.

Coronavirus | Aug 25, 2020

6 must reads for the AEC industry today: August 26, 2020

Big-box retailers’ profits surge, and rent payment tracker finds 90% of apartment households paying rent.

Coronavirus | Aug 25, 2020

7 must reads for the AEC industry today: August 25, 2020

Medical office buildings get a boost by demand and capital, and why the COVID-19 pandemic is increasing the need for telemedicine. 

University Buildings | Aug 20, 2020

Student housing in the COVID-19 era

Student housing remains a vital part of the student and campus experience.

Coronavirus | Aug 17, 2020

Covid-19 and campus life: Where do we go from here?

Campus communities include international, intergenerational, and varied health-risk populations.

Coronavirus | Aug 10, 2020

Reimagining multifamily spaces in the COVID era

Multifamily developments pose unique challenges and opportunities.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category



MFPRO+ Special Reports

Top 10 trends in affordable housing

Among affordable housing developers today, there’s one commonality tying projects together: uncertainty. AEC firms share their latest insights and philosophies on the future of affordable housing in BD+C's 2023 Multifamily Annual 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