CREJ - Healthcare Properties - July 2017
It’s no secret that technology’s role in health care is increasing and evolving with every passing day. Meanwhile, with the exception of building information modeling and various mobile technologies, buildings are mostly being built in the same manner as they were 10 to 20 years ago. Technology and low-voltage related systems used to be an afterthought because of their minimal impact on the building operations and systems. Take, for example, an ultra-high-tech computer chip factory built in Denver in the 1980s. At that time, it embodied some of the latest technology. However, the factory had three low-voltage systems: access control, video surveillance and fire management. A factory of this complexity today could potentially have more than 30 systems to operate various controls, security, sensors and other systems. The industry often references “MEP” as mechanical, electrical and plumbing due to the intense nature of these scopes and considering they range from 30 to 40 percent of most health care project budgets. Given the growing cost and need for low-voltage technology, soon “MEP” will be known as “MEP-T” with the technology network as the fourth crucial utility. Health care organizations are investing less in mega projects and more on infrastructure and technology (as well as outpatient and physician integration). Many renovation and expansion projects are experiencing the challenges of interfacing with existing low-voltage infrastructure or implementing entirely new infrastructure. A health care provider must consider the cost benefit analysis of salvaging existing infrastructure or building new infrastructure to accommodate the rapidly advancing technology systems. Historically, low voltage systems have been provided by specialty subcontractors that work underneath electrical, mechanical, security and door subcontractors. These scopes of work often are executed in a silo. However, if these systems are not carefully integrated from the beginning of the project, an influx of low-voltage coordination and clash issues will surface. These late-coordination issues typically increase project cost and schedule during installation, commissioning and turnover. Considering all systems in an MEP-T approach can minimize these clashes and solve a problem before it becomes one. Through research and project results, we have found that an MEP-T integrated approach to delivering low-voltage systems during construction can save roughly 8 to 27 percent, depending on project complexity. Low-voltage systems are becoming an increasingly valuable portion of the overall project budget. Based on 10 health care projects across the country, low voltage accounted for roughly 5 to 10 percent of the overall budget, so savings are significant. How to Approach the Fourth Utility For all health care organizations beginning new projects, the T in MEP-T should be just as much of a discussion topic in the schematic design phase as the structure and envelope. Facility operators will need time to thoroughly assess their infrastructure, understand evolving and available medical technology, review technology matrix dependencies and predict future growth of the facility. JE Dunn has taken a fully integrated approach to incorporating network systems prior to construction commencing on several projects, the Banner Harmony Hospital in Fort Collins and at the St. Joseph Catholic Health Initiative Replacement Hospital in Dickinson, North Dakota. Both large-scale hospitals (north of $50 million and more than 150,000 square feet) saw the value in approaching all low-voltage systems in a comprehensive approach, as the fourth utility of the hospital. The project team should properly account for these technology considerations early in the budgeting and construction planning. Early emphasis placed on technology will help vet coordination challenges up front and reduce downstream issues and increased costs. Teams should be asking questions related to interoperability for central monitoring and control. It is critical to ensure new technology is both efficient and scalable. By striving for convergence in technology systems, it will generate a lower total cost of ownership for the technology investment. This ultimately will maximize the return on that investment. Organizations need to ensure that construction managers have the proper expertise on technology systems. Extensive expertise and management will better orchestrate this process. Consider integrating all technology scopes under one management source to ensure all systems are being considered throughout each subcontractor scopes of work to eliminate silos. This integrated approach will reduce challenges for both organizations and project teams. It also will provide a central point of accountability for the entire technology system. Ultimately, this fourth utility isn’t just a trend reserved for health care. In the future, every device manageable from doorbells to toasters will be connected to the internet. The trend in technology and integration is truly skyrocketing. How well we plan for the integration of these technology systems will setup organizations from health care providers to construction managers for success.