It’s Our Time Under the Lights
Traditionally B.C.’S unsung hero of healthcare, Royal Columbian Hospital has begun an unprecedented and transformational redevelopment
Hospital upgrades are always an important undertaking, as well as being elaborate in terms of logistics. But the impact of the three-phase, $1.35-billion improvement for New Westminster-based Royal Columbian Hospital is such that it recently prompted Tom Sparrow, the hospital’s redevelopment chief project officer, to remark, “What’s taking place is spectacular and of significant benefit to New Westminster, Metro Vancouver and all of B.C.”
That’s because the upgrades — which comprise the largest government-funded health care redevelopment project ever approved in B.C. — are for the only hospital in the province with Level 1 trauma, cardiac care, neurosurgery, high-risk obstetrics, neonatal intensive care, and acute mentalhealth care services, all on one site. Royal Columbian is B.C.’S busiest cardiac care centre; it is the only hospital in B.C. that cares for certain critically ill pregnant women and their unborn children; and it is one of the province’s busiest emergency departments and medical heliports.
There are many other distinctions to Royal Columbian, which is also the province’s oldest hospital (established in 1862); but the bottom line is that with it serving about one third of the total population of B.C., the upgrades — Phase 1 of which is already underway — will take these services to stratospheric new heights.
As far as Royal Columbian site medical director and critical care physician Dr. Steve Reynolds is concerned, the upgrades are also drawing much-needed attention to the hospital’s achievements. “I came here eight years ago and was struck by how such a talented team of health care professionals
did amazing work and yet weren’t inclined to draw attention to themselves,” he says. “It’s an admirable quality, but unfortunately it tends to compromise Royal Columbian when it comes to advocating for funding or the distribution of resources.”
So how will $1.35 billion make Royal Columbian better than it already is? For starters, the first phase will add a new mental health and substance use wellness centre to the infrastructure, consisting of 75 beds (an increase from the current 30) as well as a new, more efficient energy plant and an advanced fibre-optic network.
Phase 2, which will unfold between 2020 and 2024, will see the construction of a new acute-care tower to provide more beds, a new and larger emergency department, four more operating rooms, more MRI capacity, plus equipment and site enhancements.
The final phase, which will commence in 2023, includes upgrades to areas in the Health Care Centre and Columbia Tower to support the beds and services added in Phase 2. It includes expansion of clinical support spaces, conversion of four-bed inpatient rooms, and improvements and expansions to the pediatric and neonatal intensive care units.
Sparrow notes that Royal Columbian is also respected as a teaching hospital in partnership with the University of British Columbia and other institutions: “We have upwards of 1,400 UBC residents and other students working here per year and that, too, will increase in size.”
The amount of planning and collaboration required to move this project forward is enormous, with the provincial government, Fraser Health, and the Royal Columbian Hospital Foundation responsible for funding — the latter currently fundraising in order to make multi-million dollar contributions to the three phases. “It’s interesting to think that donations from industries and the community allowed the original Royal Columbian to be built in 1862 for just under $3,400, and here we are relying on benefactors again,” says Foundation president and CEO Jeff Norris. “The response we’ve received is overwhelming: we’ve already raised one-third of the $9 million we set as the Foundation’s goal for Phase 1 of redevelopment, thanks to a $1 million donation from BMO Financial Group to really get the ball rolling.”
As for determining the actual components of the upgrades, “A massive number of stakeholders are working closely with architects and builders, with three or four iterations of every element being carefully considered before one is finalized,” according to Sparrow.
Sue Paish, the Foundation’s redevelopment campaign cabinet chair, says, “The hospital and the Foundation have been scrupulous not only in the brick-and-mortar development, but also the service delivery plan.” To which Reynolds adds, “Our culture, our processes, how we flow patients through the system — everything is being analyzed to create even better efficiencies than we have now.”
Paish continues, “This process is vital, because health care needs are evolving. To take just one example, the population of seniors we serve will double in 20 years, and there are plenty of other changing demographics we must be ready for.”
While various public figures associated with the upgrades expressed their excitement about the project when it was first announced in 2017, New Westminster mayor Jonathan Cote most accurately summarizes the sentiment by remarking, “Finally, the sleeping giant that is Royal Columbian is getting the attention it deserves. We’re very much looking forward to how the future will unfold.” ■