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

Visibility breeds traffic in healthcare design

Healthcare Facilities

Visibility breeds traffic in healthcare design

Ryan Companies has completed several healthcare projects that gain exposure by being near retail stores or office buildings.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | April 7, 2022
Visibility breeds traffic in healthcare facilities Edward-Elmhurst-Health-Clinic_Woodridge-MOB_Interior_MRI_People
Edward-Elmhurst Health located its 36,000-sf clinic near two busy roads in Woodridge, Ill., that see about 55,000 cars per day. The building’s owner and contractor, Ryan Companies, has been getting more requests for healthcare buildings near retail-office corridors. Image credit: Peter McCollough

Last October, the Edward-Elmhurst Health system opened a 36,100-sf multi-specialty clinic in the Chicago suburb of Woodridge, Ill., on what had been an undeveloped intersection of two busy roads that sees an estimated 55,000 cars per day. The leased building—whose lot was zoned originally for a Walgreens—is near a senior living facility, a gas station across the street, and a forest preserve.

The general contractor Ryan Companies, which owns this building and constructed it from designs by Jensen & Halsted, has benefited from the ongoing trend among healthcare systems wanting to place hospitals, clinics, and medical offices within office-retail corridors that, despite rising vacancy rates during the coronavirus pandemic, still promise exposure to ample vehicular and foot traffic.

The point of such placements, explains Curt Pascoe, Ryan Companies’ Director of Real Estate Development in Chicago, is to make healthcare “more accessible and visible in a highly competitive marketplace.” He describes this as the “retailization” of healthcare that enhances customer convenience. And while this trend has been evident for a while, Pascoe expects it to accelerate as the healthcare sector continues to consolidate with an eye toward bringing care closer to where patients live.

The Edward-Elmhurst Health Center is the second facility that Ryan has built in partnership with that health system, which recently merged with NorthShore University HealthSystem. The Woodridge center includes a walk-in clinic, and services for behavioral health, physical therapy, laboratory, and diagnostic imaging. It also has offices for primary care physicians and specialists.

Froedtert Community Hospital – Mequon.jpeg
Froedtert Community Hospital is a 17,000-sf microhospital in Mequon, Wis., that was developed on two parcels along the shores of Lake Michigan, an area that has benefited from commercial and residential development in recent years. Photo courtesy Ryan Companies 

Ryan Companies, which is based in Minnesota, has been engaged by several Midwestern healthcare clients on similar projects that it has recently completed or has in the works. They include:

• A core-and-shell reconstruction of a two-story, 50,000-sf building as part of the redevelopment of the Oakmont Point office park in Westmont, Ill. Compass Health Center, a behavioral health provider, leased the entire building, which opened last August as the second anchor tenant in this 18-acre complex. Designed by Chicago-based Wright Heerema Architects, the building features a 15-foot clear height with floor-to-ceiling windows that overlook a four-acre pond. The center provides psychiatric care for children and adults. Pascoe says this building is situated off a major highway, and the surrounding office park includes several other medical-related facilities.

• Last December, on Port Washington Road in Mequon, Wis., a Milwaukee suburb, Ryan completed construction of the Froedtert & Medical College of Wisconsin Community Hospital, a 17,000-sf microhospital designed by Eppstein Uhen Architects with eight in-patient beds and seven emergency department beds. This microhospital is across the street from the 89,300-sf Froedtert Mequon Health Center, which Ryan developed in 2017.

Mequon is on Lake Michigan’s western shore, where there has been considerable commercial and residential development along Interstate 43, with more planned. To overcome the challenge of finding a suitable site in this area, Ryan Companies combined two former residential parcels, secured zoning changes, and obtained multiple easements. The microhospital is scheduled to open during the first half of this year.

“Our development team hit it out of the park with site selection and meeting with neighbors concerned about impact, while navigating complex municipal permitting,” says Pascoe. Ryan Companies had built a similar 18,100-sf microhospital in Pewaukee, Wis., for this healthcare system, which opened in December 2020.

Pascoe couldn’t discuss other healthcare facilities near retail-office corridors that his firm is currently involved with, except to note that a lot of these so-called off-campus facilities deliver care at lower costs, and can be built less expensively. (He declined to provide construction costs for the abovementioned projects.) While all of Ryan’s recent healthcare projects have been new builds, Pascoe acknowledges the opportunities that adaptive reuse might present to healthcare clients in the future.

Related Stories

Healthcare Facilities | Apr 16, 2024

Mexico’s ‘premier private academic health center’ under design

The design and construction contract for what is envisioned to be “the premier private academic health center in Mexico and Latin America” was recently awarded to The Beck Group. The TecSalud Health Sciences Campus will be located at Tec De Monterrey’s flagship healthcare facility, Zambrano Hellion Hospital, in Monterrey, Mexico.

Healthcare Facilities | Apr 11, 2024

The just cause in behavioral health design: Make it right

NAC Architecture shares strategies for approaching behavioral health design collaboratively and thoughtfully, rather than simply applying a set of blanket rules.

Healthcare Facilities | Apr 3, 2024

Foster + Partners, CannonDesign unveil design for Mayo Clinic campus expansion

A redesign of the Mayo Clinic’s downtown campus in Rochester, Minn., centers around two new clinical high-rise buildings. The two nine-story structures will reach a height of 221 feet, with the potential to expand to 420 feet.

Products and Materials | Mar 31, 2024

Top building products for March 2024

BD+C Editors break down March's top 15 building products, from multifamily-focused electronic locks to recyclable plastic panels.

Healthcare Facilities | Mar 18, 2024

A modular construction solution to the mental healthcare crisis

Maria Ionescu, Senior Medical Planner, Stantec, shares a tested solution for the overburdened emergency department: Modular hub-and-spoke design.

Healthcare Facilities | Mar 17, 2024

5 criteria to optimize medical office design

Healthcare designers need to consider privacy, separate areas for practitioners, natural light, outdoor spaces, and thoughtful selection of materials for medical office buildings.

Healthcare Facilities | Mar 15, 2024

First comprehensive cancer hospital in Dubai to host specialized multidisciplinary care

Stantec was selected to lead the design team for the Hamdan Bin Rashid Cancer Hospital, Dubai’s first integrated, comprehensive cancer hospital. Named in honor of the late Sheikh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the hospital is scheduled to open to patients in 2026.

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Mar 14, 2024

First-of-its-kind sports and rehabilitation clinic combines training gym and healing spa

Parker Performance Institute in Frisco, Texas, is billed as a first-of-its-kind sports and rehabilitation clinic where students, specialized clinicians, and chiropractic professionals apply neuroscience to physical rehabilitation. 

Healthcare Facilities | Mar 7, 2024

A healthcare facility in New Jersey will be located at a transit station

The project is part of a larger objective to make transportation hubs more multipurpose.

University Buildings | Feb 21, 2024

University design to help meet the demand for health professionals

Virginia Commonwealth University is a Page client, and the Dean of the College of Health Professions took time to talk about a pressing healthcare industry need that schools—and architects—can help address.

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