Chicago Sun-Times

RUSH TO BUILD OUTPATIENT CARE CENTER

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN,

Rush University Medical Center has pulled demolition permits to clear three blocks of West Harrison Street, including town homes once used for student housing, to make way for a new outpatient care center connected to the rebuilt hospital.

“We’re trying to accommodat­e the tremendous growth in outpatient care. Most care is moving to outpatient care, leaving hospitals for the more critical care. We’re at the limit of our capacity here,” Rush University Medical Center spokesman John Pontarelli said Wednesday.

“The land is being cleared to build a new outpatient care center that will be connected to our hospital. We’re consolidat­ing all of our outpatient offices . . . into one convenient center for patients. They’re [ now] in multiple sites across our campus on many different floors in different buildings. [ The new building will] allow us to better serve our growing number of outpatient­s.”

The new building will dramatical­ly improve the “patient experience” by giving them access to “multiple specialist­s” without “having to walk to various locations,” he said.

Rush University Medical Center was rebuilt in 2012 on the south side of the Eisenhower Expressway. The new hospital was preceded by new orthopedic and cancer centers.

Last year, Rush got the go- ahead to build a new academic village on the north side of the expressway on the old Malcolm X College site it shares with a Chicago Blackhawks training facility.

Now, the Rush constructi­on boom is adding a new chapter with a new outpatient center located directly east of the hospital tower at Ashland and Harrison.

On Feb. 27, the city’s Department of Buildings issued 13 demolition permits authorizin­g Rush to tear down hospital- owned buildings in the 1400, 1500 and 1600 blocks of West Harrison Street.

For 35 years, the northeast corner of Ashland and Harrison has been home to Center Court Gardens, a 14- building, 265 apartment complex used for student housing that is now mostly empty.

Thirteen of those buildings will now be torn down to make way for the new outpatient center and parking. The building furthest to the east will be used by the constructi­on management team.

Roughly 288 of Rush’s 2,500 students were living in the complex targeted for demolition.

Over the last year, Rush University has helped Center Court Gardens residents find alternativ­e housing. The university has also secured a block of apartments at the Tailor Lofts Student Apartments, 315 S. Peoria, one mile east of the Rush campus.

Pontarelli refused to put a price tag or timetable on the new outpatient facility, pending the filing of a formal “Certificat­e of Need” with the Illinois Health Facilities and Services Planning Review Board. Nor would he say how far along the hospital is when it comes to fundraisin­g for the project.

In November, 2015, Rush talk- ed about building a nine- story, 620,000- square foot outpatient center at Harrison and Ashland and completing constructi­on by 2020.

At that time, the cost of the new Rush Center for Advanced Health Care with space to accommodat­e 40 percent growth in outpatient services was pegged at $ 500 million.

“The building will be funded through a combinatio­n of revenue from operations, debt financing and philanthro­py,” Pontarelli wrote in a follow- up email.

Ald. Jason Ervin ( 28th), whose West Side ward includes the threeblock stretch of West Harrison, could not be reached for comment on Rush’s plan to cash in on what has become one of the fastestgro­wing sectors of the health care industry.

Surgeries that once required lengthy hospital stays are now being conducted on an outpatient basis. That allows patients to cut costs and recuperate at home while freeing up hospital beds to handle the most seriously ill patients.

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 ??  ?? Rush University Medical Center | KEVIN TANAKA/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES
Rush University Medical Center | KEVIN TANAKA/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES

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