The executive leader for the $450M New Hospital Building at Stamford Hospital, and the Master Plan for further hospital development is Stamford Health’s Stan Hunter. For his work on Stamford Hospital, Stan was the recipient of 2015 Association of General Contractor’s of Connecticut “Owner of the Year” Award. Stan needed a strong, collaborative relationship with an experienced general contractor to achieve the Hospital’s goals. He found the perfect partner in Mark Miller, Account Manager and Project Director for Skanska USA Building. Mark has more than 25 years of construction expertise and a history of successful project completion spanning a wide range of industries, including healthcare, research, hospitality, municipal, higher education, and office construction. Mark is a licensed professional engineer and certified general contractor, as well as a LEED Accredited Professional.
Together, Stan and Mark worked with the latest technologies, including Building Information Modeling (BIM), to create a building designed to respond to the needs of its users, from patients and doctors to nurses, other hospital staff and those responsible for maintaining the complex facility after construction is complete and welcomes its first patients.
On the facilities side, Skanska used BIM modeling of the equipment and MEP (Mechanical, Electrical, and Plumbing) systems to coordinate work on the new Central Utility Plant. During early review of the design with facilities staff, Skanska found that relocating some variable-frequency drives (VFDs) would improve access for maintenance – and that was just one example of how the team identified ways to drive a more efficient, cost-effective maintenance process. In addition to planning the project infrastructure, BIM technology was used to ensure that medical and patient imaging equipment was precisely coordinated to meet manufacturer’s site specific requirements and all patient care needs. The medical equipment packages for the Operatories, Cath Labs, ICU and Emergency Department procedure rooms are extremely complicated and extensive. Every equipment support, back box, conduit run, light fixture and diffuser must be carefully planned in placement and constructed in the proper sequence to achieve success in delivering the patient care space. BIM techniques allowed the team toplan efficiently and most cost effectively, well in advance of deploying installation labor to the field.
Through technology, hospital staff were given the benefits of a virtual walk-through and were able to give input into an improved patient design. Skanska also built full scale mockups of the patient rooms and treatment spaces to further collaborate with hospital staff on design. The result of the collaboration between the teams, under the leadership of Stan and Mark, is a facility that is sustainable and designed with state-of-the-art equipment and spaces that work for the patient and the team caring for them.
The new Stamford Hospital was designed by the Texas based firm, WHR Architects, and is scheduled to open in September, 2016.