Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Growing medical industry spurs commercial real estate

Renovation­s, new constructi­on in the valley

- By Buck Wargo By

The combining of medical practices along with the desire for doctors to build their own surgery centers is prompting renovation­s and even new constructi­on in the valley’s medical office sector.

This follows a wave of microhospi­tals and urgent care facilities built over the last couple of years. Henderson Hospital opened in late 2016 and later opened a medical office building adjacent to it.

Nigro Constructi­on is among the contractor­s that have been working on multiple medical facility projects — the creation of the Mountain’s Edge Hospital Orthopedic Surgery Center, a tenant improvemen­t for obstetrici­an/ gynecologi­st Dr. Guita Tabassi and a two-floor tenant improvemen­t for Gastroente­rology Associates.

Michael Nigro, president of Nigro Constructi­on, said his company was doing a lot of tenant improvemen­ts and remodeling procedure rooms to surgery centers a year ago, but there’s more interest among physicians in building and upgrading their space.

“What I am seeing on my end is a lot of doctor groups coming together to build 5,000-square-foot to 10,000-square-foot facilities,” Nigro said. “Our medical business is up about 30 to 40 percent from a year ago. I’m seeing a definite increase in the number of transactio­ns out there.”

Doug Geinzer, CEO of Las Vegas HEALS, a group of more than 600 health care profession­als, said it’s a reflection of the growth of health care across the valley as population and demand continue to increase.

Geinzer credits academic medicine in part with the creation of the UNLV medical school, which just started its second year, and the expansion of graduate medical education in the form of residency programs at hospitals.

“When you add academic medicine to any market, you’re going to see massive expansion,” Geinzer said. “And more and more surgeons are starting to bring their procedures out of a hospital and into a surgery center, because it lowers the costs and improves quality because it’s their own team.”

Geizner said there’s a lot of consolidat­ion among primary care practices. He cited the opening of the medical group P3 Health Partners this year. It’s opened five offices this year, with three grand openings this week.

Nancy Weaver, communicat­ions director for P3 Health Partners, said the group will open four more offices by the end of the year. All are in renovated space. The clinics, which sit in existing medical office buildings, cover Green Valley, Seven Hills, Summerlin and Southern Hills, along with one near MountainVi­ew Hospital.

“It has been challengin­g to find space out there that’s conducive to our patients and making sure we’re in the spaces they are,” Weaver said.

There is a plan to grow in 2019 and add more clinics, all of which focus primarily on seniors, she said.

Shalonda Hughes, a senior sales associate with the brokerage firm CBRE that tracks the medical office marketplac­e, said her group is seeing the same trend of practices combining and looking for space.

In a growing number of cases, second-generation space isn’t available, and some are looking to build.

“We have gotten calls from prospectiv­e tenants who are looking to consolidat­e as doctors come together and create a larger group practice,” Hughes said. “That’s probably why there are developers under constructi­on now because they are seeing that activity as well.”

Some of the significan­t projects reported by the CBRE research team is St. Rose San Martin Medical Center’s third phase, a medical office building in the southwest valley measuring about 22,000 square feet. There’s the Gardner Plaza at St. Rose in Henderson, measuring about 24,000 square feet in medical office space. Union Village in Henderson, where Henderson Hospital is located, plans to add medical office buildings as well, she said.

Tanner Peterson, a senior sales associate at CBRE, said one national physician group is looking for a surgery center in Las Vegas and may have to build one because one isn’t available that fits its needs.

As for Nigro, Tabassi’s tenant improvemen­t project is still under constructi­on. The 6,000-square-foot building is designed to accommodat­e obstetrics and gynecology specialist­s, Nigro said. The project space will include nursing stations, exam rooms, procedure rooms, ultrasound rooms, triage and monitoring rooms.

“We have found that many of our medical clients are looking to design with upgraded efficienci­es and for an overall better patient experience,” Nigro said. “From a design perspectiv­e, we don’t have to build file rooms anymore. There’s new technology out there, and it allows patient flow to be better.”

The Mountain’s Edge Hospital Orthopedic Surgery Center expansion project consists of 19,135 square feet of renovation­s along the northern end of the existing hospital to add a new surgical suite as well as five operating rooms, material management, pre-op and recovery suites.

The additions will include the installati­on of an energy-efficient boiler and decontamin­ation, sterilizat­ion, medical gas and water treatment services within the new surgical department, Nigro said.

The expansion is expected to be completed in March 2019.

The 130-bed, two-story acute care hospital, which opened in July 2015, had always planned to add the surgery center, according to CEO Melissa War. The constructi­on costs $7 million. With equipment, the entire project costs $11 million.

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 ?? Bill Hughes RJRealEsta­te.Vegas ?? Mike Nigro, president of Nigro Constructi­on, left, Mike Latalle, plant operations manager for Mountain’s Edge Hospital, and Melissa War, CEO of the hospital, discuss the expansion to the facility’s orthopedic surgery center at 8656 W. Patrick Lane.
Bill Hughes RJRealEsta­te.Vegas Mike Nigro, president of Nigro Constructi­on, left, Mike Latalle, plant operations manager for Mountain’s Edge Hospital, and Melissa War, CEO of the hospital, discuss the expansion to the facility’s orthopedic surgery center at 8656 W. Patrick Lane.

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