flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

A new mental health center in Miami offers alternatives to incarceration

Healthcare Facilities

A new mental health center in Miami offers alternatives to incarceration

The seven-story building has 208 beds.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | January 16, 2024
The Miami Center for Mental Health and Recovery includes a courtroom as part of its intake and evaluation process.
The recently completed Miami Center for Mental Health and Recovery helps divert people with serious mental illness toward care and away from detention. Images: SBLM Architects

Among the 25 cities in the U.S. with the largest homeless populations, the only city in Florida is Miami, with roughly 3,700 homeless, or 8.1 people per 1,000, according to U.S. News and World Report. Local agencies and programs such as Camillus House’s Lazarus Project and the Miami Permanent Supportive Housing Program target individuals suffering from mental illness that experts identify as one of the root causes of homelessness.

A team that included SBLM Architects recently completed the renovation and conversion of a vacant seven-story, 180,000-sf building—which had previously served as a mental health evaluation and treatment center—into the Miami Center for Mental Health and Recovery, whose goal is to divert individuals with serious mental problems from the criminal justice system to a facility where they can receive proper care and treatment, and possibly transition into more stable housing.

The Miami Center is a response to the Baker Act, a Florida law passed in 1971 that enables families and loved ones to provide emergency mental health services and temporary detention for people who are impaired because of their mental illness, and who are unable to determine their needs for treatment.

The revamped, 208-bed Miami Center, which in late December received its Temporary Certificate of Occupancy, is unique in that its first floor, where detainees are processed and evaluated, includes a Hearing Room with judge and magistrate chambers for related hearings and legal proceedings.

SBLM’s design, in fact, was “conceived” by Judge Steven Leifman, Associate Administrative Judge in the criminal division of Florida’s 11th Circuit Court. “The judge has been the driving force behind this,” confirms Jim Cohen, a Vice President with Miami-based SBLM Architects, who spoke with BD+C yesterday. Judge Leifman was also instrumental is raising funds for this Center.

Bureaucratic snags delay development

Cohen recounts that the “mental health diversion” concept emerged in 2010 after an expose in the mid 2000s revealed that Miami-Dade County's Correctional Department wasn’t equipped to provide the care needed by mentally ill inmates.

At first, the plan was to use only a couple of floors in the building, which was built in 1980. That morphed into a design-build project that at one point had Johnson Controls offering to pay for the entire renovation if its systems were installed. (The county declined that offer.)

The county hired SBLM in 2015, and Cohen says now that the building provided the “backbone and space to realize the judge’s vision.” The building team on this $52 million renovation project included Thornton Construction Company (GC), Bliss & Nyitray (SE) TWR Engineers (MEP), and TLC Engineering for Architecture (technology).

A continuum of care

The upper floors offer housing
The upper floors of the Miami Center for Mental Health and Recovery offer short- and longterm housing.

After the intake and evaluation processes, an individual is moved into Crisis Stabilization Unit on the second floor with 16 beds, outpatient clinics, 15 offices for support services, and a conference center for professional and educational training (including law enforcement training specifically for this population). The second floor also has a “respite area” for persons who don’t meet the Center’s crisis criteria but have nowhere else to go.

There’s a secure wing on the second floor for residents that includes a gym, a multipurpose day room, visitation areas, and access to a 33,000-sf outdoor recreation space with landscaping, seating, a walking path, and basketball courts.

Mechanical equipment is on the third floor, which also serves as a physical and acoustical buffer from the resident sleeping areas on floors four through six. (The seventh floor hasn’t been built out yet.) Each resident floor has six to eight sleep pods that allow patient care to be segmented. A maximum of five beds per resident floor may be assigned to that floor’s private bathroom.

Resident floors have dedicated support areas for pharmacies, exam rooms, professional therapy offices, laundries, and dining. As a resident’s condition stabilizes, there can be relocations to higher floors that provide independent living opportunities. As such, Miami Center claims to be the first of its kind in the country that offers a continuum of healthcare for the mentally ill that includes the prospect of reintegrating into society.

Treatment instead of detention

The custodial component, says Cohen, can last up to six months. If the patient shows improvement, he or she is eligible for longer-term houisng on floors five and six. At that stage, a patient can opt to leave the program.

The opening of the Miami Center, which will cost $30 million per year to run, is projected to save Miami-Dade County $100,000 per person annually by providing treatment programs to mentally ill people who otherwise would be held for extended periods in county detention facilities. Cohen says he’s been contacted by the city of Seattle about Miami-Dade’s diversion efforts, and notes that Judge Leifman has toured the facility with representatives from other cities.

Cohen adds that the first floor of the building includes a commercial kitchen that, once operational, could provide patients with training applicable to the food service industry.

Related Stories

Building Team | Jul 12, 2022

10 resource reduction measures for more efficient and sustainable biopharma facilities

Resource reduction measures are solutions that can lead to lifecycle energy and cost savings for a favorable return on investment while simultaneously improving resiliency and promoting health and wellness in your facility.

Healthcare Facilities | Jun 22, 2022

Arizona State University’s Health Futures Center: A new home for medical tech innovation

In Phoenix, the Arizona State University (ASU) has constructed its Health Futures Center—expanding the school’s impact as a research institution emphasizing medical technology acceleration and innovation, entrepreneurship, and healthcare education.

Healthcare Facilities | Jun 20, 2022

Is telehealth finally mainstream?

After more than a century of development, telehealth has become a standard alternative for many types of care.

Codes and Standards | Jun 14, 2022

Hospitals’ fossil fuel use trending downward, but electricity use isn’t declining as much

The 2021 Hospital Energy and Water Benchmarking Survey by Grumman|Butkus Associates found that U.S. hospitals’ use of fossil fuels is declining since the inception of the annual survey 25 years ago, but electricity use is dipping more slowly.

Healthcare Facilities | Jun 13, 2022

University of Kansas Health System cancer care floors foster community and empathy

On three floors of Cambridge Tower A at The University of Kansas Health System in Kansas City, patients being treated for blood cancers have a dedicated space that not only keeps them safe during immune system comprising treatments, but also provide feelings of comfort and compassion.

Sponsored | Healthcare Facilities | May 3, 2022

Planning for hospital campus access that works for people

This course defines the elements of hospital campus access that are essential to promoting the efficient, stress-free movement of patients, staff, family, and visitors. Campus access elements include signage and wayfinding, parking facilities, transportation demand management, shuttle buses, curb access, valet parking management, roadways, and pedestrian walkways.

Healthcare Facilities | Apr 19, 2022

6 trends to watch in healthcare design

As the healthcare landscape continues to evolve, IMEG’s healthcare leaders from across the country are seeing several emerging trends that are poised to have wide-ranging impacts on facility design and construction. Following are six of the trends and strategies they expect to become more commonplace in 2022 and the years to come. 

Healthcare Facilities | Apr 14, 2022

Healthcare construction veteran creates next-level IPD process for hospital projects

Can integrated project delivery work without incentives for building team members? Denton Wilson thinks so.

Market Data | Apr 14, 2022

FMI 2022 construction spending forecast: 7% growth despite economic turmoil

Growth will be offset by inflation, supply chain snarls, a shortage of workers, project delays, and economic turmoil caused by international events such as the Russia-Ukraine war.

Laboratories | Apr 7, 2022

North Carolina's latest play for biotech real estate development

The Tar Heel State is among a growing number of markets rolling out the welcome mat for lab spaces.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




Mass Timber

British Columbia hospital features mass timber community hall

The Cowichan District Hospital Replacement Project in Duncan, British Columbia, features an expansive community hall featuring mass timber construction. The hall, designed to promote social interaction and connection to give patients, families, and staff a warm and welcoming environment, connects a Diagnostic and Treatment (“D&T”) Block and Inpatient Tower.

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