flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

Emerging trends in healthcare development: neighborhood care, mixed-use models on the rise

Emerging trends in healthcare development: neighborhood care, mixed-use models on the rise

In urban and even suburban markets, real estate is about the "live, work, play," with close proximity to mass transit and other amenities, like retail stores. Healthcare organizations are following suit.


By Eric Fisher and Patrick Duke | June 4, 2014
An example of emerging "live, work, play" strategy is the development of residen
An example of emerging "live, work, play" strategy is the development of residential townhomes and apartments within close proxi

Health systems and hospitals acquiring or developing real estate is not new. For years, healthcare providers have been repositioning their portfolio in an effort to minimize cost and reduce risk, particularly in the wake of the Affordable Care Act. The difference in today’s trends is not the size or use of the real estate, but where it is located and the theory behind it’s placement. 

NEW TRENDS

In urban and even suburban markets, real estate today is about the "live, work, play" notion. Within residential projects, close proximity to mass transit and other amenities, like groceries or retail stores, makes for a successful development.  

According to The Center for Transit Oriented Development, the number of households looking to rent or buy housing within a half mile of fixed-guideway transit stops is expected to reach 14.6M by 2025. Ancillary development of retail and services to support this population will continue to follow.  

Healthcare organizations are also evaluating these developments in order to identify a market response, especially in heavily populated urban areas. 

Placed next to restaurants and apartment complexes with proximity to public transportation and other quick mart stores such as CVS and Walgreens, healthcare organizations can provide convenient care to the neighborhood in ways the community had not been previously served. The products being put in place within this environment can range from prompt care clinics to larger ambulatory care facilities.  

Some recent market examples feature ambulatory care center developments which include services like primary and preventative care, radiology, rehabilitation services, urgent care, and specialists in cardiology, orthopaedics, sports medicine, and women’s health. These centers are increasingly being placed above a walk-up anchor tenant such as a retail pharmacy or other health related retail operation. Together they create a destination that becomes the preferred one-stop shop for healthcare in the community. 

This retail and mixed-use model can position a healthcare organization to capture large portions of an area’s growing population, providing a new market for care delivery. Essentially, with this type of development, healthcare has transitioned into another mixed-use retail shop. 

Another example of the "live, work, play" strategy is the development of residential townhomes and apartments within close proximity of healthcare campuses. The award-winning Whitehall Community in Bryn Mawr, Pa., fits this product description. The development was the result of a partnership with Main Line Health and created a "village" within walking distance to not only the hospital’s clinical services, but the town’s shops and restaurants. Different than other national developers’ recent projects, the target for these townhomes wasn’t Millennials. Instead, Main Line Health created four-story, luxury homes that feature an elevator option for the community’s aging Baby Boomers wanting an urban feel but convenient access to healthcare.  

FINDING THE OPPORTUNITY

Establishing a presence in urban areas, be it through new development or occupying vacant retail space, allows for multiple competitive advantages for regional, super regional and national systems. First, systems are able to capture a market otherwise taken by their competitors, increasing visibility and volumes. With costly emergency room visits, the new patients seek quick, convenient, and competent care at a lower cost than what a traditional ER delivers. 

Second, occupying vacant space on Main Street, or in a busy neighborhood, provides the system with speed-to-market and the ability to capture that market share quicker and at a less costly rate. Systems may opt to buy the storefront, or rent, both in less time than new construction would take. 

Historically, the retail and banking industries have utilized advanced predictive analytic techniques incorporating market demographic and psychographic datasets for guidance in planning their retail and customer oriented store and branch networks. By combining these proven techniques with rigorous healthcare and patient center datasets and real-time local market intelligence, healthcare organizations can identify optimal opportunities for growth of the business. Utilizing portfolio analytics tools provides the rationalization for service locations as well as predicts the financial impact and overall feasibility of investment decisions.   

Healthcare organizations traditionally have not chosen to push the envelope when it comes to real estate development, but the business of healthcare today requires a different approach. In order to identify opportunities and develop an appropriate deal structure, healthcare organizations must have the appropriate tools and expertise to balance the risk. This is being accomplished by a combination of adding expertise in-house and partnering with outside real estate professionals.

CONCLUSION

Health systems desire the cost savings of preventative care and creating more healthy communities. By concentrating efforts at the core of neighborhoods in more urban and populated areas, systems can serve exponentially higher numbers of patients. Branding is a crucial element of this urban-centric outpatient strategy. Without maintaining consistency with the other hospitals, medical office buildings, and even the other outpatient centers, the perception of the system’s presence is lost - visibility is key.

Those hospitals, systems and health care providers taking a proactive, creative approach to real estate acquisition and development will continue to advance the industry in light of reform. We continue to look to these innovators for the pulse of today’s healthcare. 

About the Authors
Eric Fisher is Managing Director with Trammell Crow Company. Patrick Duke is Managing Director with CBRE Healthcare.

Related Stories

| May 10, 2012

Chapter 7 When Modern Becomes Historic: Preserving the Modernist Building Envelope

This AIA CES Discovery course explores the special reconstruction questions posed by Modern-era buildings.

| May 10, 2012

Chapter 6 Energy Codes + Reconstructed Buildings: 2012 and Beyond

Our experts analyze the next generation of energy and green building codes and how they impact reconstruction.

| May 10, 2012

Chapter 5 LEED-EB and Green Globes CIEB: Rating Sustainable Reconstruction

Certification for existing buildings under these two rating programs has overtaken that for new construction.

| May 10, 2012

Chapter 4 Business Case for High-Performance Reconstructed Buildings

Five reconstruction projects in one city make a bottom-line case for reconstruction across the country.

| May 10, 2012

Chapter 3 How Building Technologies Contribute to Reconstruction Advances

Building Teams are employing a wide variety of components and systems in their reconstruction projects.

| May 10, 2012

Chapter 2 Exemplary High-Performance Reconstruction Projects

Several case studies show how to successfully renovate existing structures into high-performance buildings.

| May 9, 2012

Chapter 1 Reconstruction: ‘The 99% Solution’ for Energy Savings in Buildings

As a share of total construction activity reconstruction has been on the rise in the U.S. and Canada in the last few years, which creates a golden opportunity for extensive energy savings.

| May 9, 2012

International green building speaker to keynote Australia’s largest building systems trade show

Green building, sustainability consultant, green building book author Jerry Yudelson will be the keynote speaker at the Air-Conditioning, Refrigeration and Building Systems (ARBS) conference in Melbourne, Australia.

| May 9, 2012

Tishman delivers Revel six weeks early

Revel stands more than 730 feet tall, consists of over 6.3 milliont--sf of space, and is enclosed by 836,762-sf of glass.

| May 9, 2012

Stoddert Elementary School in DC wins first US DOE Green Ribbon School Award

Sustainable materials, operational efficiency, and student engagement create high-performance, healthy environment for life-long learning.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category

Mass Timber

Charlotte's new multifamily mid-rise will feature exposed mass timber

Construction recently kicked off for Oxbow, a multifamily community in Charlotte’s The Mill District. The $97.8 million project, consisting of 389 rental units and 14,300 sf of commercial space, sits on 4.3 acres that formerly housed four commercial buildings. The street-level retail is designed for boutiques, coffee shops, and other neighborhood services.


Construction Costs

New download: BD+C's May 2024 Market Intelligence Report

Building Design+Construction's monthly Market Intelligence Report offers a snapshot of the health of the U.S. building construction industry, including the commercial, multifamily, institutional, and industrial building sectors. This report tracks the latest metrics related to construction spending, demand for design services, contractor backlogs, and material price trends.



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