Marquette General Announces New Hospital Construction Plan

Posted by on September 19, 2013

Marquette General Hospital and Duke LifePoint Healthcare have announced plans to construct a new 265-bed hospital to replace the regional medical center facility presently located on College Ave. in Marquette.

“This is an amazing development for our patients and the entire Upper Peninsula region,” said Marquette General CEO Gary Muller.  “Many, many details need to be worked out, but the decision has been made to proceed with planning for a new hospital campus.  Our commitment is to develop the finest healthcare facility imaginable.”

Marquette General was acquired by Duke LifePoint Healthcare in September 2012 and, according to Muller, diligent research and deliberation began before the acquisition was complete to explore options for expanding and enhancing medical services at the present hospital location and evaluate feasibility of constructing a new hospital facility.

Duke LifePoint committed $300 million in capital to expand and upgrade MGH over the next 10 years.  The new hospital decision will accelerate the capital investment process.  It will take approximately three years to plan, design and construct the new facility.  Adjoining the 265-bed hospital structure, Marquette General plans to construct a 168,000-square-foot physician office building.

It was estimated that expansion and renovation of the current hospital would cost approximately $230 million over several more years.  Constructing a new hospital and physician office building is estimated to cost approximately $290 million.

With new hospital construction in the early planning stages, a location for the facility is yet to be determined.  Input on design will continue to be sought from patients, staff and physicians.  Many focus groups have already taken place in regard to facility upgrades and have played an important role in arriving at the decision to construct a new hospital.   The design phase of the project will take several months, with continuous input from many sources.

Muller said, “Considering the hundreds of millions of dollars in capital allocated, we determined that building a true Twenty-first Century hospital is the best course for us in fulfilling our mission of providing the highest quality of care as the Upper Peninsula’s regional medical center.”

Key factors in the decision include:

-Patient-focused facilities that emphasize patient flow and technology.

-Efficiencies in regard to layout, utilities, infrastructure and employee work flow

-A need for additional property to accommodate long-range expansion and new service growth.

-Ability to design a modern medical office building, cancer center, inpatient and outpatient surgical centers, multiple tertiary care centers, and provide an all-private inpatient room model.

-Aesthetics and patient comfort in a healing environment.

“Our existing facility has served the community well,” Muller said. “However, when you look at the many buildings that house Marquette General, you see a cluster of structures ranging in age from nearly 100 years old to 10 years old.   In order to embrace the medical advances and many ongoing changes in medical care delivery, we have concluded that building a new hospital will best benefit our patients and the UP community we serve.”

Additional details of the new hospital will be announced in the coming months as plans are finalized.

Content