This 8-story flagship cancer center consolidates on-campus and outpatient services, offering patients a robust cancer treatment program inclusive of 35 diagnostic imaging modalities (MRI, PET/CT, PET/MRI, SPEC/CT, CT, X-Ray, Ultrasound, Fluoroscopy, Mammography, Bone Densomintry and Stereotactic), infusion bays, exam clinics, a Clinical Research Unit (CRU)with laboratory, phlebotomy and venous access device services, an outpatient services laboratory, a retail pharmacy, sterile processing, a women’s center and building support. The Duarte Outpatient Clinic connects to the existing Amini Building via a second-level building connector.
Helen Diller Medical Center, New Hospital at Parnassus Heights
Spurred by over $600 million in donations, the New Hospital at Parnassus Heights will open in 2030 with a 37% increase in bed capacity, taking the number of beds from 499 to 682, and a nearly 65% expansion of the Emergency Department, bringing the total number of bays to 71. The 15-story hospital will alleviate increased demand for acute, emergency and intensive care beds and will feature the latest innovations in design, technology and patient care. Also included in the design is the 114,000 square-foot renovation of the existing Moffitt and Long Hospitals.
*Performed in collaboration with OneEQ as O+C, A Joint Venture
Presbyterian Tower
The 900,000 SF, 17-story UPMC Presbyterian broke ground June 2022 and is anticipated for completion in fall 2026. The tower will be home to 636 private patient rooms and 12 operating rooms to deliver UPMC’s nationally ranked care in specialties such as transplantation, cardiology/cardiac surgery and neurology/neurosurgery. Nearly one-quarter of the patient rooms will be Intensive Care Units or acuity-adaptable rooms, which will allow patients to transition through their care with continuity of space and staff. The digitally based hospital will revolutionize patient care technology with digital walls to individualize the patient experience through virtual consultations and connection with the outside world.
Orange County Cancer Center
City of Hope’s Orange County Cancer Center represents the first half of a $1B cancer treatment campus designed to bring comprehensive specialty cancer care to the 3.2 million residents of Orange County. The four-story, 190,000 SF building houses an expansive suite of ambulatory diagnostic and treatment services, including:
- Nuclear Medicine with 1 PET-CT and 1 SPECT-CT
- Radiation Oncology with 1 MRI-LINAC and 1 LINAC
- Imaging with 1 3T MRI, 1 1.5T MRI, 2 CT, 1 Fluoroscopy and 1 X-Ray
- Women’s Imaging with 1 DEXA Bone Density Scanner, 2 Mammogram, 1 Stereotactic Mammogram and 2 Ultrasound
- Ambulatory Surgery
- Interventional Radiology
- Laboratory Services including Clinical, Pathology and Phlebotomy
- Clinical Research Unit (CRU) laboratory supporting phase I-III clinical trials
- Pharmacy Services including Retail and Compounding
- Infusion with 43 bays and 10 private rooms
- Clinic with 67 exam and treatment rooms and 15 interactive consultation rooms
- Sterile Processing
- EVS & Materials Management
- Shared Support
Recuperative Care Centers at Rancho Los Amigos, LA+USC and Olive View Medical Center
The Recuperative Care Centers were planned and constructed in parallel with LAC+USC Medical Center’s $68.5M Restorative Care Village to support the health, safety and wellness of LA County’s most vulnerable population, including those suffering from substance use disorders, homelessness, mental illness and medical comorbidities. The Centers are spread across three separate sites: LA+USC Medical Center (33,444 SF with 96 beds), Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center (22,000 SF with 50 beds) and Olive View Medical Center (16,500 SF with 48 beds). Each Center is managed by the Los Angeles County Department of Health Services – Housing for Health (HFH) and provides clinically enriched interim housing with on-site nursing support, health oversight, case management and connection to permanent housing.
Nuclear Medicine Department
CHOC’s Nuclear Medicine Suite opened in the summer of 2022, bringing the first dedicated pediatric nuclear medicine and molecular imaging department to Orange County. Located in the hospital’s Bill Holmes Tower, the 4,000 SF department is home to two SPECT-CT scanners and one PET-CT scanner, allowing pediatric patients from newborn to young adult to undergo advanced diagnostic imaging with treatments that can be calibrated to provide the lowest possible radiation but highest quality imaging for accurate diagnosis. In response to space constraints, the three modalities are aligned along a common corridor and share a single control room.
Coronado ED & ICU
The approximately 8,000 SF remodel of Sharp HealthCare’s first floor Emergency Department and fourth floor Intensive Care Unit was planned in response to increased demand and is just part of the hospital’s largest renovation effort to date. The expanded 15-bed Emergency Department allows for the hospital to service two emergency tracks – a quick care track and a complex treatment track – and houses triage, exam and treatment areas, two nurse stations and support spaces. The remodeled ICU houses six larger, private patient rooms, two dedicated care partner lounges, an endoscopy room and support spaces.
Vietnamese American Service Center
Developed to address health disparities between Vietnamese Americans and the local community, the 3-story, 37,000 SF Vietnamese American Service Center (VASC) serves as a one-stop hub for the County’s health and human services, offering a behavioral health clinic, public health center with triage, exam rooms, procedure rooms and testing lab, dental clinic, outpatient pharmacy, social services, senior nutrition program, on-site child supervision and wellness-promoting community programming. Since opening, the VASC has become the largest senior nutrition program in Santa Clara County, serving 500 meals a day. It has also achieved LEED Silver certification as an all-electric facility that is zero net energy ready.