Tag Archive for: broward health

9600 W Sample Road 760x320

Broward Health purchased a Coral Springs office building for $11 million as the public health system continues an active year in real estate acquisitions.

Eden Sample LLC, managed by Gideon Harari in Miami, sold the 40,926-square-foot office at 9600 W. Sample Road to Broward Health, also known as the North Broward Hospital District. The price equated to $269 per square foot.

The property last traded for $5.8 million in 2018.

The five-story building was constructed on the 1.34-acre site in 1974. It’s located just north of Broward Health Coral Springs.

Broward Health spokesperson Nina Levine said it would use the building for medical office space. Broward Health already has its pediatric diabetes center in the building, and there are third-party medical tenants there as well.

 

Source:  SFBJ

 

Broward School District Land In Parkland_Image Credit Google Maps 760x320

A plot of land once envisioned as the site of a Parkland elementary school could become the future site of a Broward Health medical complex.

The hospital system, operated by the taxpayer-funded North Broward Hospital District, is seeking to acquire from the Broward School District a 10-acre parcel at the southwest corner of University Drive and Trails End Drive in Parkland.

The School Board bought the land for $5.85 million in 2005 with plans to build a new elementary school. The city of Parkland contributed $850,000 toward that purchase. But the project was one of many that got shelved during the recession a few years later.

Parkland is one of the few areas of the county where schools remain crowded and there’s a demand for more facilities. But the state won’t allow the district to build any new schools because it already has 54,100 empty seats elsewhere in the county where students could attend.

Broward Health already acquired a 7-acre site directly adjacent to the land, paying $14.5 million in 2020, according to the Broward Property Appraiser’s website. That land and the school district’s property both remain vacant.

The hospital system would like to create a complex with a specialty care physician practice clinic within the next three to five years, David Clark, senior vice president of operations of the hospital district, told the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

The facilities would likely include an educational component where Broward high school students in health science programs could get training. He said there may also be retail spaces available for lease to local businesses as well as community and green space.

Broward Health has a hospital about five miles south in Coral Springs.

He said the hospital district’s acquisition of the 7-acre site was part of the hospital’s growth plan. The hospital could build on that site even if it doesn’t acquire the school district land.

“I think each piece of property is developable,” he said. “But when you look at the overall highest and best use of the property and the community benefit to the property, [the school district property] allows us to have a conversation of how we can maximize both properties. We think it’s a win for the community and the residents of Parkland.”

The proposal has some interest from some School Board members, who are looking for ways to help the district overcome a looming budget crisis. Other board members are more cautious, saying the district needs to ensure that it won’t have a use for the land in the future. The school district has not identified the land as surplus.

School Board Chairwoman Lori Alhadeff, who lives in Parkland and represents the affected area, said the district shouldn’t rush into disposing of the property. It may want it for a school in the future or to house a district program, she said. She also questioned why fellow School Board members were eager to build a new medical complex in Parkland.

“I’m sitting back in shock hearing that Parkland is in need of a medical center,” she said. “I live in Parkland. That conversation has never come up. You have Cleveland Clinic right now down the street. You have hospitals on U.S. 441 and in Coral Springs.”

She said the School Board should wait until Superintendent Peter Licata develops his plan to redefine the district. After the district closes and repurposes schools, there may be the opportunity to build schools in areas where there is a need, such as Parkland, she said.

Alhadeff added there may be other property the district would rather sell. And if the district decides to sell the property, it should be competitively bid, she said.

The school district also owns another undeveloped tract of land on the northeast corner of Nob Hill Road and Hillsboro Boulevard in Parkland.

Some Parkland city officials have also warned about moving too fast.

The School Board agreed Wednesday to hold off making any decision until at least June, while also directing Licata to develop a long-term plan for its facilities and land.

 

Source:  SunSentinel

Map of North University Drive and Trails End in Parkland Florida 760x320

The vacant property owned by the Broward County School District at the corner of University Drive and Trails End in Parkland is likely to become a Medical Facility with an educational component for local students.

The Broward County School Board will be voting on the topic at a meeting on January 23. The proposed plan would have Broward Schools enter into negotiations with Broward Health about selling the vacant land, which is just over 10 acres, for an “educational purpose.”

If the motion is approved on January 23, 2024, Superintendent Licata would immediately enter into negotiations with Broward Health.

According to a release from BCPS, the “ultimate concept includes a medical facility for the area that will provide opportunities for Broward County School students in the areas of medical sciences, nursing, and other related fields. The opportunities are endless for internships, career days, volunteer service hours, to name just a few of the benefits.”

The Board Meeting on January 23 will be a key component to the process.

“Engaging in community conversations and with the City of Parkland regarding selling this piece of land is crucial,” said Broward School Board Chair and Parkland resident Lori Alhadeff. “Ahering to policy 7002-B on real estate acquisition and disposal and Policy 7000 will ensure transparency and compliance throughout the process.”

 

 

Source:  Tap Into Parkland

baptist-sunrise

Baptist Health South Florida is set to buy city-owned land in Sunrise for its first hospital in Broward County, beating out a rival bid for the 25-acre site.

The Sunrise City Commission voted 4-1 Tuesday to sell the hospital development site at 12401 West Oakland Park Boulevard to Coral Gables-based nonprofit Baptist Health for $14.3 million.

The price matched a joint bid for the site by two tax-supported hospital systems, Memorial Healthcare and Broward Health.

City commissioners who favored the bid by Baptist Health cited unkept promises by Broward Health to build a hospital in Sunrise at Pine Island Road and Oakland Park Boulevard, where the hospital system acquired property 20 years ago.

City commissioners in August declared the 25-acre site a “surplus” municipal property. It is on the northwest corner of Oakland Park Boulevard and the Sawgrass Expressway.

 

 

Source:  The Real Deal

Scientists arabic team at modern hospital lab, group of doctors

Two years after the Legislature dissolved rules that restricted the opening of new hospitals and major bed expansions at existing ones, changes to the health care landscape are taking shape.

The rollback of the Certificate of Need (CON) law creates growth opportunities for health systems that could lead to big capital spending on construction and medical equipment, while boosting access to health care in neighborhoods without enough providers.

Several local hospital systems are already considering expansions with new facilities.

However, the question is whether the new hospitals will improve the health care system or only add to the higher costs that are making insurance coverage more expensive for many companies. Some critics warn that employee bidding wars between expanding health care systems could drive up costs.

What shouldn’t be overlooked is that removing the CON requirement will allow existing hospitals to expand their bed count, which is less expensive than building new hospitals, said Ray Berry, CEO of Cooper City-based Health Business Solutions, which helps hospitals deal with claims.

He doesn’t expect new competitors to enter the Broward County market because they would be at a disadvantage when negotiating with insurance companies that have established hospital partners there, said Berry, a board member of the North Broward Hospital District, which governs Broward Health.

With all the residential development in Fort Lauderdale, Broward Health Medical Center should eventually grow to accommodate the population, he said.

South Florida already has plenty of beds to accommodate its population, so new hospitals could end up lowering bed occupancy rates for other hospitals, said Salvatore Barbera, associate director of the health care administration program at Florida Atlantic University’s College of Business.

Instead of lowering prices to compete for patients, hospitals may end up raising prices to cover their operating costs with fewer patients, he added.

“It’s probably going to stir up the market, and you may see some failed operations as a result,” said Barbera, a former hospital CEO.

 

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