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

As cities scramble for hospital beds to treat COVID-19 patients, Leo A Daly offers a hotel-to-hospital solution

Coronavirus

As cities scramble for hospital beds to treat COVID-19 patients, Leo A Daly offers a hotel-to-hospital solution

The firm has devised three conversion models, for different levels of healthcare required.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | March 31, 2020
As cities scramble for hospital beds to treat COVID-19 patients, Leo A Daly offers a hotel-to-hospital solution

This cutaway rendering shows some of the changes that would need to be made to convert a hotel room to a hospital room capable of handling patients infected with the coronavirus. Images courtesy of LEO A Daly

   

Several states and municipalities are aggressively investigating the conversion of hotels into makeshift hospitals in order to free up much-needed beds in hospitals for patients who have contracted COVID-19.

Leo A Daly is currently negotiating with several hoteliers about converting large portfolios of hotels into healthcare facilities that follow the firm’s Hotel2Hospital prototype, which would conform with design guidelines released last week to state governments by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which relax some of the hospital safety standards.

The Nebraska-based firm is working with several national design-build contractors to get such conversions started.

“Hospitals and hotels have several common characteristics that make this a promising solution,” says Joshua Theodore, ACHE, EDAC, vice president and global health practice leader for Leo A Daly. “Both are comprised of private, individual rooms with a dedicated toilet and HVAC systems. Air handling is critical to patient and staff safety in infectious disease environments, so hotel rooms have an instant advantage over other typologies in terms of viability.”

Leo A Daly did not disclose the healthcare systems or contractors it is speaking or working with about its conversion proposals.

 

Three modes for hotel-to-hospital conversions for COVID-19

The average hotel could accommodate up to 80 patients, Leo A Daly estimates. And many are located near existing hospitals.

Hotels also have food service, cleaning service, waste removal and laundry service, all of which are critical to any inpatient healthcare facility, says Theodore. He notes, too, that hotels are currently experiencing high vacancy rates that are likely to persist until the coronavirus dissipates.

Hotel2Hospital offers three adaptive reuse models. Each will require different levels of biocontainment and intervention to the physical building.

Reuse Model 1 would be to quarantine suspected or asymptomatic COVID-19 patients. Reuse Model 2 would be for symptomatic isolation of patients with underlying risk factors who are already sick but aren’t likely to require full ICU inpatient treatment. (Ventilators and telemetry would likely be used for this facility type). Reuse Model 3 would be for non-infected patients who currently are being hospitalized and could potentially receive treatment in alternative care environments so as to free up hospital beds for more acute COVID-19 patients.

For Reuse Model 1, the hotel furniture could be used, but the bed would require medical linens. A nurse station would be created in a room opposite the elevator core, and the floor would also have an eye/hand washing station. In this model, the reception and office areas in the lobby would be repurposed for patient check-in. Any retail area would be converted to a pharmacy. And offices could be converted to lab space. The converted room would also need to be modified with a larger exhaust fan system to its existing toilet exhaust duct system to create negative pressure.

 

The Reuse Model 2 would, among other changes, convert the hotel's reception area into a patient check-in, and make retail and office spaces into pharmacies and labs. The carpeting in the rooms and corridors would be removed.

A conversion of a hotel to Reuse Model 2 would undertake the measures spelled out for Reuse Model 1, and then some. Carpeting, polishes, and concrete floor sealing would be removed from the rooms and corridors. Hospital-grade vinyl would replace fabric on furniture. Curtains would be replaced with motorized shade systems. Mobile headwall units and portable med gas bottles would be installed, as would electronic wireless patient surveillance and monitoring devices. The converted hotel would also need to create storage areas for portable medical equipment. (Medical gases would have to be portable.)

Reuse Model 3 would require all of the modifications described in Reuse Models 1 and 2. Leo A Daly suggests that exhaust modifications may not be necessary in all rooms. But infrastructure changes would include providing an exterior emergency generator system and transfer switch equipment for connection to the building’s power infrastructure. The IT infrastructure would be upgraded. Treatment and procedure spaces would be identified and equipped with recirculating HEPA filtration units to increase the room’s air changes per hour.

Theodore acknowledges that the Hotel2Hospital prototype conversions would need to address challenges that include staffing, HVAC, building codes, medical equipment management, the building’s power infrastructure, and meeting cleaning/support standards.

He says that Leo A Daly’s design teams have been meeting with hospitals, federal officials, developers and hotel owners to work through these complexities

Related Stories

Coronavirus | Jun 23, 2020

A look back at design standard shifts: ADA vs. COVID-19

The short story is official design guidelines are slow to be developed and made into law. 

Coronavirus | Jun 23, 2020

WATG designs solution for isolating without sacrificing social connectivity

The design was inspired by oriel bay windows.

Coronavirus | Jun 22, 2020

Boldt creates an innovation task force to speed up safe opening of jobsites, 14 offices

Boldt creates an innovation task force to speed up safe opening of jobsites, 14 offices

Coronavirus | Jun 19, 2020

Experts address COVID-19's impact on nursing homes and schools on The Weekly

The June 18 episode of BD+C's "The Weekly" is available for viewing on demand. 

Coronavirus | Jun 18, 2020

Brown University tops off first housing building in three decades

The facility, scheduled for completion next April, will combine a residence hall with student health services.

Coronavirus | Jun 17, 2020

HOK and Germfree partner to design mobile COVID-19 testing lab

Access to quick, reliable, and repeated testing has been one of the greatest challenges for businesses, institutions and individuals during the COVID-19 crisis.

Coronavirus | Jun 17, 2020

Guiding changes in the workplace: Past, present, and future

Since the COVID-19 pandemic, many companies are managing sudden change as they assess the impact on workplace design and how people use spaces.

Coronavirus | Jun 14, 2020

A new report on how campus buildings can reopen safely

Leo A Daly white paper suggests dividing students into smaller “cohorts,” and assigning bathroom spaces.

Coronavirus | Jun 12, 2020

BD+C launches 'The Weekly,' a streaming program for the design and construction industry

The first episode, now available on demand, features experts from Robins & Morton, Gensler, and FMI on the current state of the AEC market.

Coronavirus | Jun 9, 2020

Going viral: How the coronavirus pandemic could change the built environment

Architecture and construction firms—and their clients—are asking new questions about infection control as it pertains to people assembly, building wellness, and technology.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




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