San Antonio Express-News

UHS proposes farwest Side hospital

Board of managers agrees to pay $13Mfor a mostly vacant 80-acre tract

- By Laura Garcia STAFF WRITER

University­health Systemis laying the groundwork for a hospital on the far West Side, one of the fastest-growing parts of San Antonio.

It would be taxpayer-funded UHS’ second hospital. Its flagship University Hospital, with 700 beds, is in the South Texas Medical Center.

Officials say they’re still early in the planning for the new facility. Yet the system’s board of managers agreed Aug. 25 to spend $13.4 million for a mostly vacant 80-acre tract of land, according to meeting minutes. The greenbelt is between Culebra and Shaenfield roads, alongside Loop 1604.

George Hernandez, UHS’ president and CEO, said the acquisitio­n will set a “foundation for future growth” as the system acts on its long-term plan to build additional hospitals across the city.

He expects to close on the purchase soon but hasn’t set a timeline for design work and constructi­on of the hospital.

UHS is acquiring the land from Creamer Ltd., an affiliate of Rick Sheldon Real Estate LLC

Onwednesda­y, the city’s planning commission OK’D changing the designated use of a 32.2-acre section of the property from “mixed use” to “community commercial.”

The city’s zoning commission will vote Oct. 6 on whether to rezone the tract, whichwould clear UHS to build an acute care hospital with a helicopter landing pad.

Two years ago, health care consulting firm Blue Cottage conducted a market analysis for the Bexar County Hospital District, the public agency that does business as UHS. The firm identified thewest Side as a good candidate for a suburban hospital campus.

The hospitalwo­uld be in Bexar County Commission­er Justin Rodriguez’s precinct. He said the

farwest Side has seen significan­t population growth in recent years, especially around Loop 1604. New school constructi­on is one of the signs that families are flocking to the area.

In a separate undertakin­g, UHS is working with UT Health San Antonio on the school’s plan to build a teaching hospital in the Medical Center by spring 2024.

The system also is building the Women’s and Children’s Hospital, a 12-story tower with two new emergency department­s, at its Medical Center campus.

UHS officials say building another hospital would free up about 70 beds at University Hospital, allowing staff to concentrat­e on more complex cases and serve more patients transferre­d from communitie­s throughout the region.

“We need to have a better geographic distributi­on of our hospital resources to support growth but also our existing ambulatory

system,” Hernandez said. “We’re looking at the Northeast corridor aswell, and I thinkwe’re going to look at the southern corridor.

The timing on all those could be different.”

UHS shares the market with privately owned systems such as

Baptisthea­lth System, Methodist Healthcare System and Christus Santa Rosa Health System, each of which operates several hospitals in the San Antonio area.

However, the city’s East and South sides are home to fewer hospitals or medical clinics. Residents in those communitie­s often travel to the downtown area for health care.

“On the East Side, we always welcome any type of health care providers, especially right now because of this pandemic, which has exposed that there is a disparity in health care for African American and Hispanic communitie­s,” said Tuesdaé Knight, president and CEO of the economic developmen­t organizati­on San Antonio for Growth on the Eastside.

Knight said she understood that UHS couldn’t have too many projects in the works at the same time but that she hoped UHS had plans to build on the East Side, too.

“I can tell you that we are so happy that the West Side is getting this because I knowthat they need it,” she said. “I’m sure that our day will come.”

 ?? Mike Fisher/staff artist ??
Mike Fisher/staff artist
 ?? William Luther / Staff file photo ?? The farwest Side has seen significan­t population growth in recent years, especially around Loop 1604, said Bexar County Commission­er Justin Rodriguez.
William Luther / Staff file photo The farwest Side has seen significan­t population growth in recent years, especially around Loop 1604, said Bexar County Commission­er Justin Rodriguez.

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