Huge San Jose hospital project undergoes major public development review

SAN JOSE — An enormous project to construct a brand new hospital and medical center in San Jose is now open for public review, with an environmental review a critical step in approving the project.

Good Samaritan Hospital has proposed a major increase in its bed capability as a part of a planned recent medical center complex in San Jose.

Tennessee-based HCA Healthcare, owner of Good Samaritan, is bringing the planned recent construction project into play, which is to be built at the location 2425 Good Samaritan Drive.

Once accomplished, the brand new campus would have 419 licensed intensive care beds. The hospital currently has 404 such beds, in keeping with an online post from town planning authority.

The project is predicated on state regulations that require hospitals in California to comply with earthquake-proof requirements.

An existing four-story tower with 89 beds meets state earthquake codes and shall be retained.

The recent hospital section shall be built adjoining to the prevailing medical center. The project will allow Good Sam to comply with earthquake regulations when construction of the brand new hospital is accomplished in 2029.

“The project expansion would preserve the existing buildings to the greatest extent possible,” HCA's planning documents state. “The project assumes that growth will occur in phases to maintain facility beds and operations without disrupting critical services.”

While changing constructing regulations prompted HCA to undertake this massive construction project, changing industry trends and patient needs also played a very important role, in keeping with planning documents.

“Changes in operating and patient care models, an increase in average patient disease status and disease prevalence, increased use of private patient rooms, and the development and impact of technology” are the fundamental aspects behind the project, the proposal says.

It looks just like the recent campus shall be about thrice the scale of the prevailing medical complex.

The total constructing area of ​​the longer term Good Samaritan medical complex can be just below 1.35 million square feet, in comparison with the present campus's total area of ​​41,500 square feet, in keeping with city plans.

According to Good Samaritan Hospital's plans, that is just over thrice the scale of the prevailing campus.

The project also features a transitional size for the campus. During the transition phase, the Good Samaritan complex would total 65,000 square meters.

The existing complex offers 1,031 parking spaces. The proposal ultimately envisages the creation of a fancy with 2,422 parking spaces.

Good Samaritan and HCA Healthcare want town to completely rezone the whole 21-acre site that features the prevailing hospital and future expansion buildings and parking.

The final phase of the project will see the development of a medical practice constructing with a complete area of ​​18,580 square meters.

“The proliferation of clinical technologies such as MRI, catheter lab, CT scan and interventional radiology has changed the standard of care and contributed to the increasing size of diagnostic and treatment departments,” the planning documents state. “Given the more complex nature of the cases treated, operating rooms have also become larger.”

Due to the complexity of healthcare, the variety of caregivers within the room and the quantity of apparatus needed has increased.

“Computers, larger anesthesia carts, perfusion machines, integrated ceiling-mounted monitors and mobile X-ray machines are just some of the equipment that is routinely brought into the operating room,” the HCA proposal states. “There must be space for all of this equipment.”

In addition to larger operating rooms, there shall be more private and bigger patient rooms.

“The project is necessary for HCA to continue to provide quality care to the population,” the healthcare titan explained in planning documents submitted to San Jose city authorities.

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