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Good Samaritan eyes big hospital bed increase with San Jose expansion

- By George Avalos gavalos@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

Good Samaritan is eyeing a big increase in hospital beds as part of its plan to triple the size of its existing health care campus in San Jose.

At present, Good Samaritan Hospital accommodat­es 273 beds on the grounds of the healthcare organizati­on's campus at 2425 Samaritan Drive in southwest San Jose.

Once complete, the new campus would contain 419 beds, according to plans on file with San Jose city officials. The facility is owned by Tennessee-based HCA Healthcare.

“HCA seeks a new planned developmen­t zoning to replace the existing zoning to address seismic retrofit requiremen­ts as required by Senate Bill 1953, to modernize hospital facilities and to improve access to comprehens­ive health care for the growing population,” said Elizabeth Cobb, a senior project manager with KimberlyHo­rn, a planning consultant for HCA for the hospital expansion.

The total building area at the future Good Samaritan medical complex would be slightly under 1.37 million square feet, compared with the current campus which totals 450,700 square feet, the city plans show.

That's slightly more than three times the size of the existing campus.

The project also envisions an interim size for the campus. In the interim phase, the Good Samaritan complex would total 378 beds and consist of 710,700 square feet.

The existing complex provides 1,031 parking stalls. The proposal would eventually create a complex with 2,422 stalls.

Good Samaritan and HCA Healthcare want city officials to completely rezone the entire 21-acre site that accommodat­es the existing hospital as well as the future expansion buildings and parking facilities.

In its final phase, the project would add a medical office building totaling 200,000 square feet.

The expansion project is being undertaken largely to comply with the requiremen­ts of SB 1953, which obliges all hospital buildings to meet certain seismic safety requiremen­ts by a deadline.

Among other key changes that would arise from this proposal, once the expansion is complete:

• The existing main building would no longer provide general acute care services by Jan. 1, 2030.

• The women's and children's center may continue to provide general acute care services after Jan. 1, 2030.

• An existing daycare center totaling 7,000 square feet would no longer exist on site after the expansion is complete.

“Reconfigur­ation of Good Samaritan Hospital needs to consider and evaluate expansion options of the diagnostic and treatment functions, new medical offices and backfillin­g the existing main hospital building with ancillary support services so as to provide for a comprehens­ive healthcare campus,” HCA and Good Samaritan stated in the planning documents.

The hospital rooms in the new main medical center are likely to be considerab­ly larger than the existing rooms.

“Currently, Good Samaritan Hospital does not have any private patient rooms,” Good Samaritan and HCA stated in the planning documents. “Today, private patient rooms are the norm and are now recommende­d” in the Facility Guidelines Institute recommenda­tions for the design and constructi­on of healthcare facilities.

In addition to private and bigger rooms at hospitals, operating rooms, as well as diagnostic and treatment department­s, have become larger, the planning documents stated.

“The project buildout condition would substantia­lly maintain the existing buildings to the maximum extent possible,” HCA and Good Samaritan stated. “The project assumes growth will occur in phases so as to maintain the beds and facility operations without the downtime of critical services.”

The project's initial phase would be the expansion of the diagnostic and treatment functions, and to shift some support services to the existing main hospital building, the planning documents state.

Constructi­on of the first phase of the expansion should be complete by 2029, according to the proposal.

“The proposed improvemen­ts are necessary to allow HCA to continue providing high-quality care to the community,” Cobb wrote in the project overview.

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