Greening the nation’s hospitals: Innovations in green healthcare construction.
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| Le Bonheur Children’s Medical Center is currently under construction.
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How Things Have Changed
When we completed Oregon’s Providence Newberg Medical Center in June 2006, we were breaking new ground and very few hospitals were building green facilities. That facility was the first LEED Gold hospital in the nation.
Since then, there has been widespread adoption of green building practices in healthcare nationwide. Even projects that aren’t targeting LEED are seeking to integrate tangible green elements. Here at Skanska, we’ve executed green healthcare projects in virtually every region of the country, and we now manage billions of dollars worth of healthcare construction projects that incorporate green aspects.
We’re seeing specialized healthcare facilities take these steps. Shands at the University of Florida Cancer Hospital is aiming for LEED Silver certification and LeBonheur Children’s Medical Center, which will be among the country’s first sustainable children’s hospitals, is also striving to meet Silver. Both will reduce waste, conserve energy and water, and provide a healthier and safer environment for patients and families.
Future Growth of Green
Adoption in these specialized care centers will lead to new applications of green methods. Increasingly, going green is helping hospitals with their needs: fulfilling faith-based mission statements; replacing aging facilities with new efficient products; increasing fundraising appeal and sponsorship; and becoming an example to their communities of how to operate facilities.
Both the USGBC’s LEED for Healthcare and the similar Green Guide for Healthcare program encourage innovation, leading to good ideas that are now becoming common practice. Skanska and its peers are on the cusp of the next wave of concepts that will, hopefully, make tomorrow’s health care facilities greener at a superior value. Already, we’ve seen potential from studies done on the feasibility of living buildings. It’s exciting to think about how elements of those projects could be applied to future healthcare environments.
We have to remain committed to finding new and innovative methods that help patient health – and environmental health. Just as doctors seek to find the best new methods to treat patients, we builders must strive to be at the cutting edge of building technology.
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