Building Owners

Tell us how you're reimagining the medical office building

'Obamacare' implementation will add thousands of people to the ranks of the insured, including many who formerly sought primary care in emergency rooms. Now, these patients will have coverage that allows them to more easily access the typical treatment channels—and that means greater demand for services provided in medical office buildings.

"Obamacare" implementation will add thousands of people to the ranks of the insured, including many who formerly sought primary care in emergency rooms. Now, these patients will have coverage that allows them to more easily access the typical treatment channels—and that means greater demand for services provided in medical office buildings.

How are AEC firms and healthcare providers creating medical office buildings that respond to the changing landscape of healthcare? We'll be exploring these questions with a BD+C article in September. If your firm has completed, or is working on, an interesting medical office building, new or renovated, I invite you to share it with me ASAP. I'd love to see photos as well as your project information, and I'm particularly interested in your thoughts about how the project exemplifies trends in healthcare design. 

Email me at [email protected]. I look forward to hearing from you.

About the Author

Julie S. Higginbotham

Julie S. Higginbotham, Senior Editor of Building Design + Construction, has more than 20 years of experience writing about the built environment. Previously she was editor of Laboratory Design newsletter, and a member of the editorial team at School Planning & Management, College Planning & Management, Building Supply Home Centers, and American Nurseryman. She is a recepient of the Jesse H. Neal National Business Journalism Award and multiple regional and national awards from the American Society of Business Publication Editors (ASBPE).

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