A post-occupancy evaluation (POE) gathers feedback from facility users to assess how well a building is performing. This evaluation is typically conducted about a year after occupancy and can be used for many purposes, including fine-tuning the facility to increase performance or evaluating the design to inform a new facility. Architects are aware of these benefits, but often struggle to justify the additional cost of conducting one to a client after the project is complete. The costs can be significant if an independent research consultant is involved, which is recommended because researchers can offer standardized, reliable methodologies and eliminate any design team bias.
These circumstances make it difficult for smaller healthcare organizations, which have neither the budget nor the resources for research consultants, to conduct a POE. Recently, Vision 3 Architects (Providence, R.I.) identified a practical and affordable solution to that problem by partnering with students from Roger Williams University’s School of Architecture, Art and Historic Preservation in Bristol, R.I. Together, the team completed one-year POEs for two facilities designed by Vision 3 Architects for Thundermist Health Center. The students served as the research team and helped to guide a future project design based on their findings.

Coming Together

Thundermist Health Center, a community health organization based in Warwick, R.I., provides medical and dental care and health-related social services to low- and moderate-income patients throughout the state. In 2013, Vision 3 and Thundermist began working on the design for the Thundermist Health Center of South County in Wakefield, R.I. The team had previously worked together on the design of a clinic in West Warwick, R.I., which opened in 2011 featuring patient-centered design concepts, including three pods of exam rooms, consultation rooms, and meeting spaces designed around central collaborative team areas.
Before diving into the design of the South County project, Thundermist leaders wanted to evaluate the results of the patient-centered design features in West Warwick to see what was working and what needed improvement. For example, they wanted to revisit the location and quantity of the staff team rooms and how many exam rooms a support team could handle. The team also wanted to see how the existing layouts were affecting patient visibility and staff privacy.
To achieve that, Vision 3 reached out to the university, which was offering a graduate course titled “Environmental Design Research.” The timing worked out well, as the semester was just starting and the professor was looking to partner with an architectural firm that had worked on some local healthcare projects and had a client that would allow students to research their facility. Vision 3 and Thundermist agreed to meet with the students to discuss the project and to provide access to the building to photograph, observe, and conduct interviews, and the students would provide precedent studies and research articles and analyze how the building design performed against the original design goals. Their final exam would be a class presentation of their findings.
The process, including the POE, data evaluations, and final presentation to the team, took place within one semester. The entire team, including the architecture firm, was given a link to the spreadsheet data to review the progress. The class of 16 students had monthly meetings with the design team at the facility, Vision 3’s office, or on campus. They weren’t paid but gained valuable experience and contacts working with a local architecture firm, and, in exchange, provided the client with unbiased feedback on the performance of its building. The professor met weekly with the students, closely monitoring the interview process and data evaluation, and incorporating lessons on the principals of evidence-based design and the role that research plays to validate design decisions.
The students spent about eight weeks observing and interviewing the staff, patients, and visitors using photo elicitation and a standardized interview document and format that was developed and monitored by their professor. The POE looked at different elements of the building in terms of the patient experience. One area of interest was the waiting room design, including acoustics, the check-in and check-out processes, and the layout of reception desks, which placed the staff at high desks instead of behind sliding glass windows.
In general, patients responded favorably to the waiting room, finding the aesthetics and natural light welcoming and the seating comfortable. They also liked the staff greeting them at eye level at the reception desk without a glass window. However, patients reported that they had a difficult time understanding where to stand or line up for the check-in/out process. The staff also suggested that the acoustics of the waiting room could be improved to protect patient privacy and to manage the overall noise level of the space.
In the clinical areas, the POE looked at how the number of medical staff members sharing team rooms affected privacy. The staff said they enjoyed sharing a team area and felt that overall patient care was improved by their collaboration. But the team area, which contained 12 staff members, was often too loud, so they suggested limiting the size of the staff areas to eight people in future designs and implementing a system for asking the room to “quiet down.” And while they liked having the team room central and surrounded by exam rooms, they felt they didn’t have enough access to daylight.
The size and layout of West Warwick’s exam rooms received universally positive responses. Each exam room contained a mobile supply cart that was docked below the countertop, adjacent to the hand sink. The staff liked that the supplies were tucked away when not needed but could be brought directly to the exam table when necessary and that the top of the cart could serve as another countertop. The laptop in the exam room was also stored on a mobile, height-adjustable cart, which allowed physicians access to their laptops while facing patients and could be moved out of the way when not needed. Based on this feedback, the design was duplicated exactly for South County’s exam rooms.
Additionally, the POE of West Warwick studied the facility’s community room, which is used to hold meetings and classes for the staff and patients. The organization wanted to better understand how the space was being used and if this feature was an asset and should be included at the South County facility. West Warwick’s community room earned positive feedback, with respondents reporting that the layout of the room allows for flexibility and the room’s operable partitions enable the room to be divided into multiple spaces to support simultaneous functions. A kitchen in the community room is used for patient education cooking classes and the local community was utilizing the room after hours for local meetings and events.

Informing Design Decisions

Based on the results of the POE performed on the West Warwick location, the Vision 3 design team made several important changes to the design of the South County facility, which opened in 2015. For example, in the waiting room, the reception desk was redesigned to be closer to the main entrance for staff to greet patients directly upon entering the facility and to avoid any patient confusion over the check-in process. The waiting room seating was also relocated to be adjacent to the exterior wall to provide access to natural light and views outdoor. Acoustics were addressed by adding carpeting, upholstered furniture, and acoustic ceiling tiles.
For the staff spaces, Thundermist took the lessons from the POE to redesign the central staff team area to feature four six-person team pods with five examination rooms in each pod. The team staff rooms were relocated to exterior walls to provide outdoor views and natural lighting and are adjacent to that staff’s pod of exam rooms. The layout of the team rooms was also adjusted so that the work areas face the walls for greater staff privacy and a wall cabinet for personal storage was added above each desk. For the corridors connecting the team areas with the exam rooms, patterned glass windows were added to improve access to natural lighting in the corridors and create a visual connection between the team and the exam rooms. Due to the success of the community room in West Warwick, Thundermist included a community room in the design for South County, with a similar room size, operable partition, and kitchen.
In mid-2016, Roger Williams University students produced another POE for Thundermist—this time on the completed South County facility—finding that many of the changes were working successfully. For example, in the waiting area, patient seating, which was arranged in both small and large groupings adjacent to the exterior walls, was providing access to natural light and outdoor views. The location of the reception desk near the entrance was also working well with patients experiencing minimal confusion about where to check-in. However, the acoustics were still a concern, so Thundermist installed a white noise system.
In the staff team pods, the proximity of team areas to examination rooms saved time and steps. Staff enjoyed the improved access to natural lighting and outside views in the room, and the patterned glass partitions between staff areas and the corridors worked well in allowing more natural light into the corridors, while also protecting the privacy of the staff work areas.

Moving Ahead

Throughout this process, we’ve learned some valuable lessons on conducting a POE. Thundermist and the university worked closely to make sure that facility operations were not adversely impacted by the students’ presence. The initial group tours and building photography took place in off-hours. To encourage participation in the POE, the staff was invited to meet with the students during lunch breaks, while patients were given a hand-out, with photos of the students, that explained the process and informed them that their 15-minute interview would be kept anonymous.
It’s critical that whoever is leading the process—whether a professor or a design team—sets the standards for the research documentation. In these POEs, the interview forms the students used were critically reviewed and trial tested. After the interviews were complete, the students entered the data into a spreadsheet, which included the gender, age range, whether the person was a patient or staff member, the room or space discussed, their frequency visiting that area, the date, the length of interview, and the feedback on the specific space. The team discussed the results, and at the end of the semester, the students presented their findings back to the design team and Thundermist.
Vision 3 plans to continue to serve as an architect sponsor to the Roger Williams University Environmental Design Research class and has recommended the university as an affordable means to provide POEs for other community health center clients. Vision 3 and Thundermist are now redesigning the first Thundermist Health Center in Woonsocket, R.I., which opened in 2005, using many of the lessons learned from these POEs to greatly inform the project. Roger Williams University students will likely perform a POE for the Woonsocket facility a year after it opens. We would recommend that design firms contact their local architecture school and discuss how they can form a relationship that benefits both parties.
Source: Healthcare Design

The aging population and the unknown future of policies are shifting the way health care organizations think about real estate.
National real estate firm JLL recently completed research on the health care industry and how organizations approach real estate with the changing landscape.
JLL Senior Vice President of Health Care Paul Heiserman said it would be impossible to talk about real estate in health care without first acknowledging the growing need to service the baby-boomer bubble, as well as the increasing costs from more advanced services and pharmaceuticals.

“Better services but not cheaper services,” said Heiserman, who is based in Columbus, Ohio. “That’s driving up prices that are really unsustainable.”

Heiserman said employers used to be more willing to take on the full burden of health care costs for their employees, but with the rising prices, the responsibility is shifting some to the patients.
The shift in payment responsibility is causing some pinches at the health care provider level and shifting the focus on where the importance of health care lies, Heiserman said.
A greater importance is being placed on reducing per capita cost, improving the overall population health and improving the overall patient experience, he said.

“Those three slices are driving a lot of what we’re seeing in the health care industry in terms of real estate,” Heiserman said.

JLL’s research concluded with five main trends in health care real estate: building room for change; optimizing their existing real estate; putting convenience first; smarter site selection based on demographics, including the placement of outpatient surgical centers; and advanced management to mitigate risks of more locations.
The trends are ways health care systems are looking to improve patient care while lowering costs, Heiserman said.
The way health care systems value patients is changing, Heiserman said. Where hospitals used to make more money by having more patients in beds, there’s now an added focus on preventive care to keep patients out of acute care, he said.
The change in philosophy is adding to the first trend, which is designing health care space to flexibility.

“We have a major shift right now, and we’re not sure where it shakes out,” he said. “You can’t count on a facility to be a static use for 20, 30 years. Design it in a way it can be converted to something else. In 20 years, what is an emergency room now might be required to be something else.”

Heiserman mentioned a health care client in another region looking to optimize its lab space. The client currently has three labs spread across different locations, not fully optimizing space.
The opportunity to consolidate lab space and eliminate duplicate real estate uses is another trend seen in the industry, Heiserman said. He said in the past, health care organizations often would grow for the sake of growth.

“They would grow whichever way made the most sense,” he said. “That worked well when there wasn’t pricing pressure. Now, it doesn’t make as much sense.”

More health care organizations nationwide are beginning to follow Fortune 500 companies in the way real estate operations are tracked and organized, he said.

“Hospitals aren’t cutting edge,” he said. “When we talk about optimization, now they’re beginning to look at operations and where they make sense. A lot of hospitals are moving administration into less expensive spaces off campus.

“The highest and best use is not administrative use.”

Another trend in health care is the location of services to more convenient locations for patients, Heiserman said.
Service convenience is being seen in Grand Rapids, said Jeff Karger, JLL senior vice president of brokerage in Grand Rapids. He pointed to Spectrum Health opening clinical space in Grand Haven and on East Beltline.

“They’re bringing it back toward the consumer, versus the acute area downtown,” Karger said. “It puts convenience first, so it encourages the patient to participate more.”

To establish those locations, health care systems are turning toward more detailed analytics to discover what move makes the most sense. The analytics are similar to how national retailers might select their next site, Karger said.
Prior to costs rising significantly, health care systems really didn’t have a need to be super selective in their next site, Heiserman said.

“Hospitals operate independently and tend not to go into other regions and tend to be very large and powerful within their community,” he said. “Hospitals were working on an island for many years and maybe didn’t have the need for increasing sophistication, but now with the pressure, they need to sophisticate to increase efficiency.”

The need for efficiency is driven by the growing competitive nature of health care, Heiserman said. Systems must be able to attract a set of patients more capable of paying so they can in turn offer cheaper services to treat a greater population.

“We’re in a largely competitive environment; most markets have quite a bit of competition, and there’s an element of trying to protect but also gain market share,” Heiserman said. “Particularly, market share that pays well, so the hospital can provide better service.”

Source: GRBJ

The future of healthcare real estate is bright with baby boomers aging, but industry leaders weighed in on what could change and why this segment is so unique from an operations standpoint.

“I’m easily bullish [on healthcare real estate]. 100%,” HCP Vice President of Leasing Tom Hulme said. “The market is smoking hot, and I’m absolutely bullish.” Hulme and other healthcare real estate leaders convened Monday at the 2017 BOMA International Conference & Expo to discuss the state of their sector and the unique nature of their arc of commercial real estate. LifePoint Health Senior Director of Real Estate Tammy Moore was equally bullish on the industry based on the sheer fact that there are so many baby boomers aging into the demographic likely in need of healthcare facilities. They were joined by Cambridge Holdings’ Ryan Doyle, who also was optimistic but cautioned ever-changing consumer demands could lead to a bearish climate.

Hospitals in tertiary markets have been closing in the years since the passing of the Affordable Care Act, but the panel was not ready to put the blame solely on the ACA. Hulme said his company did not see business impacted in the last seven to eight years from healthcare reform.

“I’ve read a report saying the United States is over-bedded, so you have to wonder if hospitals are closing because of that,” Moore said.

The panel also discussed the unique nature of healthcare real estate. Moderator and Healthcare Realty Trust Vice President Amy Byrd said medical office buildings have more specialized requirements and often have drastically more visitors than other commercial properties, leading owners or managers to approach operations and design in a different way — down to slight inclines in hallways and how that might affect a visitor.
While healthcare facilities might require more focus on detail, Byrd enjoys the challenges of this property type.

“I feel every day like I’ve contributed to someone’s well-being,” she said.

Source:  Bisnow

Delray Medical Center this week will host a ribbon cutting for its new patient tower. The $80 million project has added 96 private patient rooms to the 493-bed hospital, among other features.
The new 120,000-square-foot, four-floor tower has a rooftop helipad and 352 parking spaces. With the newly built structure, the hospital has also expanded services in orthopedics and neurosciences, advanced heart therapies, MRI capabilities, cardiac rehabilitation and other functions.
Private rooms at the new tower at 5352 Linton Blvd. in Delray Beach have 42-inch flat screen TVs, motion-sensor floor lighting and floor-to-ceiling glass windows. They will also come with services such as valet parking.
Its helipad to be placed on the roof will have a dedicated trauma elevator for expedited access to emergency facilities. The hospital says it will result in patients being treated two minutes faster than its current set up.
The ribbon cutting will be held Thursday and the grand opening of the new tower will be July 11.
Source: SFBJ