Healthcare Can Be A Good Candidate For Repurposed Space

When the topic of adaptive reuse of existing CRE properties comes up, the most typical angle is turning older office buildings into apartments.

While 2023 was a particularly active year, with 55,000 office to apartment unit conversions, according to Yardi’s Rent Café, that’s a small proportion of the 440,000 total units constructed by Real Page’s count.

Instead, developers, owners, and investors might look to other reuse, like healthcare. As that industry moves away from to outpatient care at distributed locations, it increasingly needs space. There are clinics and practices in spaces within shopping malls, freestanding retail locations, former general office buildings, and other repurposed spaces.

Becker’s Hospital Review recently looked at how Hartford HealthCare had used such properties as “a shuttered Blockbuster store, a vacant Bed Bath & Beyond and an old funeral home.”

“Though Hartford HealthCare’s approach to convenience is unique, the goal itself is shared among many health systems,” they wrote. “More organizations are zeroing in on outpatient, ambulatory care offerings as they look to retain hospital space for acute care. From freestanding emergency departments to grocery store walk-up clinics, health systems are testing new methods to expand their footprints (and appease an increasingly impatient patient before they make the switch to Amazon).”

As the Center for Health Design has noted, reuse of buildings can be more economical than trying ground-up construction, especially with the cost of land, materials, and labor in many metropolitan areas.

Appropriate buildings are not available in all locations, so repurposing is frequently not a viable alternative. Renovation costs can at times run more than new construction. There can be zoning restrictions or difficulties with community stakeholders. But there are also opportunities. Unoccupied buildings that have been sitting on the market are often available at discounted prices. If reuse of the infrastructure is possible, that becomes an additional source of savings. Often suitable buildings are available in prime locations that otherwise would be impossible to obtain.

As an article in Medical Construction & Design notes, there are additional considerations. One is visibility from the street. There should be easy access and sufficient parking. One similarity to repurposing space for logistics and warehouses is ceiling heights, “as the 10- or 11-foot ceilings common to strip-mall retail centers and commercial office buildings often don’t work for healthcare facilities.” But if the space has ceilings that are too high, like in a superstore type retail space, building interior partitions may be too difficult.

Consideration also needs a structural engineering analysis, including seismic loading and vibration. Existing elevators may be too small to enable travel by gurneys. Healthcare HVAC needs are more complex. The number of needed fixtures in restrooms may be three to four times as much as in a retail or office space. The need for greater scale is also true for electrical power.

 

Source: GlobeSt

MOB In Denver Market Among Top 20 Largest US Deliveries of 2024

Despite difficult capital conditions, the medical office sector remains a strong player in the commercial real estate industry, demonstrating resilience.

With that in mind, CommercialSearch just published a new report overviewing the medical office building market. The report looked at the 20 largest medical office deliveries of 2024, highlighting the markets with the most active medical office pipelines as well as the evolution of the largest U.S. medical building markets over the last 10 years.

The Madison market is home to the largest medical office building to be completed this year. Standing at 469,000 square feet, the Eastpark Medical Center is slated for completion in Q3 2024.

Denver Findings:

  • A rendering of the Intermountain Health Lutheran MOB. (CREDIT: Davis Partnership Architects)

    The Intermountain Health Lutheran Medical Office Building in the Denver market will be the 11th-largest medical office delivery to be completed this year, standing at 137,000 square feet.

  • Owned by Intermountain Healthcare, the building broke ground in December of 2022 and will open to the public in Q3 of 2024.
  • Davis Partnership Architects is the architect and Saunders Construction is the general contractor for the project.

NexCore Group was selected by Intermountain Health to develop the 5-story, 130,000-square-foot medical office building on the new 28-acre Lutheran campus, located at 12905 W. 40th Ave. in Wheat Ridge. The campus, including the hospital, is being relocated about 3.5 miles from its current location. The independent medical office facility will connect to the new Lutheran Hospital via a pedestrian bridge. Planned building services include cardiovascular, maternal & fetal medicine, a weight loss center, a breast cancer center, a neurology and neurosurgery center, a laboratory, and a joint-venture ambulatory surgery center.

Click here to read the full CommercialSearch report.

 

Source: Mile High CRE

Medical City McKinney Embarking On A $50 Million Expansion Project

Medical City McKinney is embarking on a $50 million expansion project, adding a five-story, 124,500-square-foot medical office building adjacent to the hospital.

This expansion will accommodate more high-level medical specialists and critical services like cardiology and orthopedics, which are set to open in the summer of 2025. Complementing the recently opened $17 million women’s hospital in November 2023 and a $64 million patient tower with an ER expansion in December 2021, this project helps meet the needs of a vibrant and growing community by being done in three phases.

The first phase includes a new parking lot on the west side of the campus, providing over 550 additional spots for the convenience of patients, visitors, and staff.

 

Source: D CEO Magazine