The New Parker MOB III Medical Office Building Breaks Ground In Colorado

Vertix Builders, a culture-focused construction company, has started construction of the new Parker MOB III medical office building on the Parker Adventist Medical Campus

As a healthcare construction specialist, Vertix Builders will be working with a team that includes RTA ArchitectsMed Development and Parker Adventist.

“We’re excited to be working with Centura Health and Parker Adventist  to bring a great facility to their Parker campus,” said Ryan Bonner, president of Vertix Builders.  “The new Parker MOB III medical office building will provide the people who live and work in and around Parker with a superior facility that will meet their healthcare needs for years to come.”

Parker MOB III will be a four story, 86,000-square-foot building located on the Parker Adventist Medical Campus.  Tenant spaces will include medical oncology services, internal medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, as well as an ear, nose, and throat practice.

Construction is scheduled for completion in early 2021.

 

Source: Mile High CRE

Health And Wellness Emerges A Top CRE Trend

Health and wellness have become a top trend in the commercial real estate industry.

Viewed as an exciting growth category for the many new concepts and innovation coming out of the asset class that was once considered one of the most traditional fields, Meghann Martindale, global head of retail research at CBRE, tells GlobeSt.com.

Health and Wellness were one of the trends widely discussed among conference-goers at this year’s International Council of Shopping Center’s New York Deal Making Conference, and were well represented and prevalent in the sessions at the three-day event, said Martindale, who attended.

“Many services are being extrapolated from mainstream medical that were once reserved for the doctor’s office,” Martindale said. “Experiences are elevating, services are becoming more accessible, and pricing is becoming more democratic across a broad range of offerings. Today’s consumers have become largely focused on a holistic lifestyle that includes health and overall wellbeing and the demand has given new and existing retailers further incentive to invest in health and wellness. The growing market has fostered a natural alliance to see more healthcare and self-care brands become prevalent in retail environments.”

 

Source: GlobeSt.

Mayo Clinic, Ascension Among Healthcare Giants Investing In Northeast Florida

In 2019, Jacksonville-based Mayo Clinic Florida said it would build a $233 million, 190,000-square-foot oncology facility that will bring proton beam therapy and carbon ion therapy to Jacksonville.

Jacksonville-based Baptist Health also began several large projects this year, including building Florida‘s second largest children’s hospital and a seven-story facility that will “reorient” its downtown Baptist Medical Center Jacksonville Hospital.

Ascension St. Vincent in Jacksonville this year filed plans with city officials to build two emergency departments that are expected to open in 2020.

In addition, Baptist Health, Gainesville, Fla.-based UF Health and Nashville, Tenn.-based HCA Healthcare all filed plans to build facilities in Nassau County.

“If you’re going to have UF Health, Baptist and HCA, three mega-competitors that can literally stare into each other’s windows along the I-95 and A1A corridor, something really good is happening, because that is a lot of capital investment, a lot of healthcare,” former economic development board executive director Laura DiBella told the Business Journal. “And healthcare, in my experience, plants their money for decades.”

 

Source: Becker’s Hospital Review