The latest trend in integrated healthcare and wellness is the emergence of facilities that track and enhance human performance at the intersection of medicine, fitness, nutrition, and recovery.
At least one startup, Chicago-based Shift, is testing the public’s fervor for one-stop-shop services that combine to minimize acute and chronic pain, illness, and disease by encouraging everyday healthy living.
Until recently, human performance has mostly been the province of professional sports teams. For example, Perkins+Will has designed the 300,000-sf, nine-story sports therapy and research center that, when completed in early 2018, will be part of the Dallas Cowboys’ 91-acre headquarters campus in Frisco, Texas. The center—a collaboration among the Cowboys, healthcare provider Baylor Scott & White, and Blue Star Sports—will include surgical, emergency care, training, and rehabilitation services.
So-called “human performance facilities” are finding their way onto college campuses, too. In the summer of 2018, McNeese State University, Lake Charles, La., is scheduled to open its $41 million Health and Human Performance Education Complex.
Richard Rhodan, the university’s Director of Facilities and Plant Operations, says the 145,000-sf facility—designed by Crawford Architects and Randy M. Goodloe Architect, and built by Alfred Palma LLC—will set aside 22,000 sf for classrooms, labs, and offices for the college’s health and human performance program, whose enrollment has increased by 20% since 2010. Another 8,500 sf feet will be shared space, where students get hands-on training in hydrotherapy, kinesiology, and other sports-related recovery procedures.
In a recent blog on BD+C’s website (www.BDCnetwork.com/JWilliamsBlog), Jennifer Williams, an Interior Designer with P+W, observed that human performance facilities for “common folk” are popping up around the country. These facilities combine diagnostic and clinical services with “performance centers” that rely on technology and coaching to help individuals and teams reach their optimum health and fitness levels.
Courtesy Shift.
In Chicago, Shift—a two-floor, 14,000-sf facility, which opened on February 15—focuses on prevention and quality of life through medical, nutrition, fitness, coaching, and recovery programs that get members directly involved in their own healthy choices and courses of action. Membership ranges from $3,000 to $8,000 annually for three tiers of health and wellness plans:
- Shift Life helps members define their health goals and create habits for healthy living. This level includes a yearly physical and 12 months of direct primary medical care, plus access to the facility’s amenities and equipment.
- Shift Extension offers all of the Shift Life services, but targets Chicagoans who travel a lot and probably won’t use the facility as their primary place of fitness and recovery. These members have access to virtual coaching sessions. Extension members also have access to a primary care physician within the facility, and a one-day-per-month pass for fitness and recovery activities.
- Shift Primary Care provides high-quality, easily accessible personalized medical care. The facility’s medical staff strives to build a long-term relationship with members.
Courtesy Shift.
“Coaching is at the heart of the Shift experience,” says Dr. Ari Levy, Shift’s Founder and CEO, an internal medicine specialist who has experience as a personal trainer and nutritionist.
His conception of Shift can be traced to his college days, when, he says, “I noticed that the fitness and medical worlds weren’t necessarily coming together. Today, we know more than ever about how the mind and body work, yet we still have chronic diseases.”
Levy says that his real estate and project team partners—notably CBRE, CannonDesign, and the DiCosola Group—were instrumental in developing Shift’s design. “We helped them organize Shift’s spaces because they weren’t exactly sure what the overall tone would be,” says Robert Benson, Principal/Design Leader in CannonDesign's Chicago office.
What Levy wanted was smooth design transitions from room to room within the facility. For example, the entrance and café on the top floor needed to be “warm and inviting,” with glass doors, translucent walls, and a reclaimed wood table that conveyed “a presence of comfort.”
A 26-foot-long, 13-foot-wide staircase, whose steps are covered with a turf and rubber motif, leads to the facility’s medical offices, which Levy describes as “safe and secure, but not clinical.”
“Ari’s idea is, ‘How can we treat people who are healthy?’” says Benson, a BD+C 40 Under 40 honoree. “This is an incredible opportunity for them, and I’m surprised something like this hasn’t happened sooner.”
Courtesy Shift.
Related Stories
Healthcare Facilities | Feb 21, 2018
New $412 million advanced research center hopes to attract scientists and clinicians in pediatric biomedical research
The Crump Firm is designing the project.
Healthcare Facilities | Feb 16, 2018
Cancer centers' 'one-stop shop'
Healthcare systems ask their AEC partners for design flexibility that is adjustable to advances in medicine and technology.
Healthcare Facilities | Feb 14, 2018
Satellite centers keep cancer treatment closer to patients' orbit
This treatment center is half new construction, half renovation of a building that had been used for family services.
Healthcare Facilities | Feb 1, 2018
Early supplier engagement provides exceptional project outcomes
Efficient supply chains enable companies to be more competitive in the marketplace.
Healthcare Facilities | Jan 30, 2018
Buffett, Bezos, Dimon partner to tackle the U.S. healthcare system
The three mega companies—Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway, and JPMorgan Chase—will pursue the formation of an independent company that is “free from profit-making incentives and constraints” when it comes to U.S. employee healthcare.
Healthcare Facilities | Jan 29, 2018
The new Virginia Tech Biomedical Research Addition will include research facilities in five thematic areas
The project is a collaboration between Carilion Clinic and Virginia Tech.
Healthcare Facilities | Jan 10, 2018
Healthcare market year in review for 2017
While we have not fully turned the corner on healthcare reform and in particular healthcare payment reform, 2017 confirmed trends of consumerism and the need for more proximate low-cost options.
Retail Centers | Jan 9, 2018
The addition of a medical practice is part of the cure for reviving a shopping mall in Scranton, Pa.
Delta Medix is one of several tenants that are changing the image of the Marketplace at Steamtown.
Healthcare Facilities | Jan 6, 2018
A new precision dental center embodies Columbia University’s latest direction for oral medicine education
The facility, which nests at “the core” of the university’s Medical Center, relies heavily on technology and big data.
Healthcare Facilities | Dec 19, 2017
‘Healing Oasis’ will provide healthcare services to veterans in northern California
Hoefer Wysocki designed the $40 million facility.