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Surgical Precision
New Hospital Gives Northwest Vegas A Shot in the Arm
By Tony Illia
A new $84 million, 171 private-bed hospital is currently
taking shape at Durango Drive and Deer Springs Way, adjacent
to U.S. 95 and the 215 Beltway.
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Healing help is on the way for residents of northwest Las
Vegas with the $100 million Centennial Hills Hospital Medical
Center scheduled to open in September. It marks Valley Health
System's fifth hospital in Southern Nevada, and its only acute
care facility in the northwest area.
Valley Health System is a unit of UHS Inc., a King of Prussia,
Pa.-based publicly traded company that's one of the nation's
largest hospital operators.
The 171-bed hospital will open with a medical staff of 500
people, but could grow to more than 800 medical employees.
"The Northwest has the valley's fastest growing ZIP codes
with only three or four limited-service medical offices in
the area," says Kevin Stockton, the new hospital's managing
director and CEO. "We hope to fill a much needed demand
for comprehensive healthcare services in the area. Currently,
people within a 5- to 6-mi area have to drive 20 minutes for
the services we will be offering."
Sandy, Utah-based Layton Construction Co. is the project's
general contractor under an $84-million guaranteed maximum
price construction contract. Situated on 36.4 acres, the eight-story
hospital tower will have a 150,000 sq ft dual-level low-rise
with a main porte-cochere entrance and separate emergency
and ambulance entries.
Designed by HKS Inc., Dallas, the entrance structure will
consist of a grand lobby with wireless internet access, six
elevators, terrazzo marble flooring and cherry wood paneling.
Design Studio Inc. of Philadelphia is the interior designer.
The 132-ft tall cast-in-place tower will have a combination
EIFS and glass skin with a dramatic full-length glazed aluminum-framed
curtain wall along the southeast corner that brings natural
daylight into the waiting areas on each level. The building
is set atop a concrete slab and footings foundation with 26,000-sq-ft
concrete floor plates. It's supported by 24-in.-sq structural
columns spaced 24-ft apart with 23 cast-in-place shear walls.
"The UHS concept for these hospitals is centered on a
nationwide prototype design with a good budget that achieves
a nice product," says Byron Donaldson, HKS' construction
manager. "Pre-cast allows panels to get poured for the
low-rise while work takes place on footings and foundation.
It allows for a very quick, efficient construction schedule."
Layton has utilized two hammerhead tower cranes with a flying
form system that fast tracks progress on the 21-month project.
The 353,000-sq.-ft. hospital will feature a 41-bed emergency
department, a 25-bed women's care unit with maternity services,
a six-bed advanced nursery and a 32-bed intensive care unit.
It additionally will have 108 medical beds, plus cardiology
and endoscopy services. Other medical offerings include radiology,
respiratory and laboratory departments as well as a CT scanner,
a full pharmacy and a cafeteria. There also will be eight
operation and two cesarean section rooms.
"The undertaking will see 300 tradesmen and about 50
subcontractors on site during the height of construction activity,"
says Troy Stephens, Layton's project manager. "Coordination
between the subs and delivery of the medical equipment are
the job's biggest challenges."
The facility will be serviced by an 8,000 sq ft central plant
with two 950-ton-capacity chillers and 15 roof-mounted air
handlers for a germ-free, climate-controlled healing environment.
There are two diesel-powered, 1,250-kilowatt emergency back-up
generators in case of an electrical black-out.
The third and fourth floors are being shelled for future expansion.
It will enable the hospital to add 80 to 90 patient beds as
needed. Plans call for a possible cancer center, women's center
and another patient tower to the southeast, doubling the hospital's
size. There are also plans for two four-story, 60,000-sq-ft.
medical office buildings on site, offering primary and specialty
care.
Key Players
Owner/Developer: UHS Inc.
General Contractor: Layton
Construction Co.
Architect/ Structural Engineer:
HKS Inc.
Civil Engineer: Lopez
Garcia Group
Electrical: GSL Electric
Mechanical: J & S
Mechanical
Steel: Steel Engineers
Inc.
Concrete: Precision Concrete;
Silver State Materials Inc.
Other: Harris Rebar; John
Jory Corp.; Southern Nevada Paving
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