2015 PDC Summit Wraps Up in San Antonio

SAN ANTONIO — The 2015 International Summit & Exhibition on Health Facility Planning, Design & Construction (PDC Summit) wrapped up this week in San Antonio with more than 3,200 senior leaders from hospitals, design firms and construction companies in attendance.

The PDC Summit is an industry event coordinated by a network of nonprofit organizations with expertise in health care planning, design and construction. Hosts for the event included the American Institute of Architects (AIA), American College of Healthcare Architects (ACHA), American Society for Healthcare Engineering (ASHE), American Hospital Association (AHA) and Facility Guidelines Institute (FGI).

Teams involved in three hospital projects earned this year’s Vista Awards, which were presented at the PDC Summit. The Vista Awards, presented by ASHE, recognize the significance of collaboration in creating optimal health care environments. Winners exemplified outstanding teamwork in all stages of their respective health care projects, from pre-planning to the final reveal.

The winners included:

New Construction

Baystate Medical Center’s Hospital of the Future

Springfield, Mass.
Baystate Medical Center has reached the halfway point in its 15-year construction master plan. The recent 630,000-square-foot campus expansion includes an inpatient bed replacement, adult and pediatric emergency department and trauma center, a heart and vascular center, surgery expansion, private patient rooms and new parking facilities. The design facilitates multidisciplinary care with a clear separation of public and patient flow from staff and supply movement. The result is a state-of-the-art building, which includes two seven-story wings and one five-story wing, focused on a patient-centered healing environment.

Renovation

Mercy Hospital St. Louis’s 2nd Floor Women’s Health Center

St. Louis
This project involved the design and construction of an entirely new infrastructure and unit layout within the original 1962 building. Three wings on the second floor of a seven-story patient tower were gutted for the project while lean design concepts were analyzed and instituted for the new unit. Decentralized nurse stations, standard equipment and placement within the patient floors, and standard support room layouts on each wing have improved operational workflow. ASHE recognized team members for this project for keeping the project on track despite unexpected plumbing issues and other speed bumps along the way.

Infrastructure

South Georgia Medical Center’s Power Plant Replacement

Valdosta, Ga.
The center’s original power plant from the 1950s was recently replaced with a modern plant designed to provide emergency power for the SGMC Main Campus as well as the new Dasher Memorial Heart Center and Patient Tower. The new power plant houses 42 miles of cables and conduit. When the power plant’s large diesel generators are fired up, the system uses 180 gallons of diesel fuel per hour to operate key systems within the hospital. ASHE recognized the innovation of the new plant.