Vanderbilt University Medical Center To Convert Tennessee Supermarket Into Surgery Center

Vanderbilt University Medical Center (Nashville, Tenn.) plans to convert a former Harris Teeter supermarket into an 15 million, 50,000-square-foot ambulatory surgery center that will include seven operating rooms, 18 exam rooms, nine infusion stations, and two procedure rooms offering urology, orthopedic, and oncology services in Belle Mead, Tenn., according to the article in the Nashville Business Journal:

Residents of Belle Meade will have a new health care option in their neighborhood. Vanderbilt University Medical Center filed permits with Metro to renovate a former Harris Teeter supermarket at a price tag of more than $15 million, according to the permits. The 50,000-square-foot Belle Meade Ambulatory Surgical Center will be located at 6002 Highway 100, at the Highway 70 and Highway 100 split.

Vanderbilt has been growing its Middle Tennessee footprint in recent years and now has approximately 100 sites of care, such as urgent care centers and oncology centers, across the region. Last year, the health system bought Tennova Healthcare-Lebanon from Franklin-based Community Health Systems.

The Belle Meade surgery center will give the neighborhood’s financially well-off residents, who typically have private insurance, a convenient access point to the VUMC system. The facility will include seven operating rooms, 18 exam rooms, nine infusion stations and two procedure rooms, according to a news release, and will offer urology, orthopedic and oncology services.

“This new facility will provide convenient, state-of-the-art care for people closer to where they live, and represents another example of Vanderbilt’s commitment to expand to meet the needs associated with our growing region,” Dr. C. Wright Pinson, VUMC deputy CEO and chief health system officer, said in the release.

It was not immediately clear when renovations on the facility would begin or when the facility is expected to open. The surgery center is currently in the design-development phase with New York-based Blair + Mui Dowd Architects, according to the release. Messer Construction Co. is listed as the applicant on the permit.  The supermarket closed in 2015.

 

Source: healthcare design