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Lessons Learned October 14 , 2014. St. John’s Regional Medical Center. Impact on St. Johns. Direct Hit Windows and Walls blown out Portions of roof pulled off Building infrastructure severely damaged Generators destroyed All communication lost
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Impact on St. Johns • Direct Hit • Windows and Walls blown out • Portions of roof pulled off • Building infrastructure severely damaged • Generators destroyed • All communication lost • Water, sprinkler, gas and sewer pipes disrupted • Liquid O2 tanks damaged • Massive debris throughout building • 86 Medical Staff Member’s Offices destroyed or severely damaged
Mercy Hospital Joplin • 100 Acre Site / 9 stories • 900,000 SF Hospital / Clinic • 200 beds with expansion to 260 beds • 39 months to design and build • 2,300 parking stalls • 15 OR's/Cath expandable to 20 • 32room Emergency Department • Emergency, Radiology and OR suite aligned • NICU, LDRP and C-Section on same floor • Cath labs, CVOR's, OR's and minor procedures in same suite • Flexible ICU / Med surgrooms • Dedicated elevators for decontamination and sterile to OR's
“Storm Hardened" Features • Concrete roofs vs. metal deck • Precast siding vs. EIFS • Concrete/Buried utility plant vs. outside • Utilities tunnel • Lowered levels below grade • Back up Centralized UPS on data • Safety windows standard/140mph/250mph vs. regular glass • Reinforced protected areas/stairs with battery lighting • Life safety equipment UPS • Equipment in hurricane hardened penthouses vs. exposed on roof • Redundant electric, water & fiber • Hurricane rated entrance doors
Central Utility Plant • Completed April 2014
Project Timeframes: Utility plant moved in April 2014 Lower level support moves in September 2014 Temporary occupancy of all areas January 2015 Final Occupancy permit February 2015 Training co-workers January 2015 - March 2015 Patient move March 22, 2015 Physician clinic move TBD Mercy Hospital Joplin