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‘Prudent, not opulent’ sets the tone for this Catholic hospital

Building Team Awards

‘Prudent, not opulent’ sets the tone for this Catholic hospital

This Building Team stuck with a project for seven years to get a new hospital built for a faithful client.


By Robert Cassidy, Executive Editor | April 9, 2015
‘Prudent, not opulent’ sets the tone for this Catholic hospital

The 93-bed Holy Cross Germantown Hospital is the first new hospital to be built in Maryland in 25 years. The 237,000-sf acute care facility resides on the campus of Montgomery College, making it the first hospital in the U.S. to be co-located on a community college campus. All photos: Alan Karchmer / Alan Karchmer Architectural Photographer

This article first appeared in the April 2015 issue of BD+C.

Holy Cross Health, a Catholic healthcare system in Maryland, opened its new 237,000-sf hospital in Germantown last October 1, thanks to a Building Team—led by SmithGroupJJR (architect), CBRE Healthcare (PM), and Whiting-Turner (GC/CM)—that simply wouldn’t give up, despite the obstacles it faced.

The 93-bed Holy Cross Germantown Hospital is the first new hospital to be built in Maryland in 25 years, the first new hospital in Montgomery County in 35 years, and the first in the U.S. to be built on a community college campus. Yet it was threatened from the very beginning.

PROJECT SUMMARY
GOLD AWARD
Holy Cross Germantown Hospital
Germantown, Md.

BUILDING TEAM
Submitting firm: SmithGroupJJR (architect)
Owner: Holy Cross Health
Project manager: CBRE Healthcare
SE: McMullan & Associates, Inc.
MEP: Syska Hennessy Group
CE/Landscaping: Macris, Hendricks and Glasscock
GC/CM: Whiting-Turner

GENERAL INFORMATION
Project size: 237,000 gsf (93 beds)
Construction cost: $110 million; $200 million total project budget
Construction period: June 2012 to September 2014
Delivery method: CM at risk

Seven years ago, Holy Cross Health President Kevin Sexton asked SmithGroupJJR to explore a partnership with Montgomery College Germantown for a new hospital on its campus. The master plan had to go through two cycles to get the go-ahead from county commissioners; then the Maryland–National Capital Park and Planning Commission had to give its OK. By October 2008, Sexton had funding in the bag from Holy Cross’s parent, Trinity Health, and was ready to file a certificate of need. That’s when all hell broke loose.

First, a rival hospital system contested Holy Cross’s CON. Worse still, the recession forced Trinity to pull the plug on all construction in its system.

On its own dime, SmithGroupJJR convened a two-day “workshop” in San Francisco with Whiting-Turner and others to explore ways to build a more cost-effective “hypothetical” 100-bed hospital. They took their recommendations back to Sexton, and within a year, he had the green light from Trinity. Holy Cross Germantown had new life.

 

just for fun, let’s add a few MORE HURDLES

In the interim, Trinity had issued new mandatory design criteria: projects were to be held to no more than $750,000 and 2,100 sf per bed. The state also tightened up its CON requirements and gave the Building Team only 90 days to develop a CON package that would meet the new criteria.

Using ideas derived from the workshop, the team came up with a three-point plan: 1) split the facility into two components—a patient tower with diagnostic and treatment facilities, and a support wing; 2) specify discrete structural, mechanical, and utility systems for each component, which would reduce costs, simplify MEP distribution, and yield more total square footage; and 3) build a prefabricated modular central utility plant that would be exempt from the CON-mandated square footage, thus yielding more clinical space.

This design scheme resulted in 30–40% savings in the sf/bed ratio. In May 2012, the Maryland Health Care Commission unanimously approved the CON. Holy Cross Germantown breathed yet another life.

Holy Cross Health’s mission called for prudence, not opulence. To fulfill that goal, the Building Team used full-scale, furnished mockups for labor/delivery, med/surg, and ICU patient rooms to get feedback from clinicians. The resulting design saved costs by reducing the amount of casework along footwalls. In reviewing bathroom mockups, Whiting-Turner suggested constructing the concrete slabs with a three-foot-radius swale sloped to the shower drain rather than a rectangular depression. This saved $125,000.

Midway through construction, a new head of surgery asked the team to consider a same-handed approach to the surgical suite layout, rather than the customary mirrored floor plan. This complicated the above-ceiling coordination for medical gases, supply air, light booms, and supports, especially since the plumbing and electrical sleeves were already in place. The team constructed virtual mockups to coordinate the work, which was completed with minimal disruption.

Note: SmithGroupJJR’s Bill Kline, a member of the awards jury, recused himself from this project.

 

Maternity services include labor and delivery rooms, caesarean surgical suites, private postpartum rooms, and an eight-bed neonatal care unit.

 

A prefabricated module is lifted into place for the central utility plant. Prefabrication enabled the components to be shipped in large sections like this and assembled ready for operation in less than three weeks.

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