Crouse Breast Health Center project set to wrap in September

SYRACUSE — Crouse Hospital is close to finishing a renovation and expansion of its Crouse Breast Health Center in Syracuse. Work at the center, which offers imaging services such as mammograms and follow-up breast health care, is set to wrap up Sept. 17. That’s eight months after crews started renovations on Jan. 20. The center […]

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SYRACUSE — Crouse Hospital is close to finishing a renovation and expansion of its Crouse Breast Health Center in Syracuse.

Work at the center, which offers imaging services such as mammograms and follow-up breast health care, is set to wrap up Sept. 17. That’s eight months after crews started renovations on Jan. 20.

The center sits across the street from Crouse Hospital in the Central New York Medical Center Building at 739 Irving Ave. Crouse leased an additional 600 square feet of space from the building’s owner, Chicago–based Lillibridge Healthcare Services, Inc., to expand the Breast Health Center to 6,200 square feet.

That additional space will be used for two new ultrasound rooms, according to Jeffrey Tetrault, Crouse Hospital’s director of engineering. The remodeling will also add patient changing rooms, he says.

The revamped center will have five patient-changing rooms, up from three. The rooms will each be about 40 square feet, much larger than the previous rooms, which were about 10 square feet each.

The new changing rooms will also offer more privacy, Tetrault says, by utilizing solid doors instead of the curtains that cordoned off the old changing rooms. And each patient will have one room dedicated to her during her time at the center.

Other improvements include a private patient-registration area and surfaces designed to make the center more comfortable, Tetrault says.

“It was your common hard-surface-floored, sterile, clinical-feeling area,” he says. “Now it’s going to be a warm, plush environment with crown molding on the ceilings and chair rail, along with multi-textured carpets.”

The center will have an energy-efficient heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning unit. And, workers are installing low-energy LED lighting systems with motion detectors.

“It’s not only to have a warm environment with multiple controls for patients for the heating and cooling systems,” Tetrault says. “We were also very sensitive to the energy efficiency.”

Crouse started consulting with physicians on the center’s redesign in March 2011, according to Tetrault. It also set up focus groups with women who had previously used the center in order to listen to their ideas on how it could be improved.

LPS Design Associates, Inc., of Stoneham, Mass. designed the upgraded center. Rochester–based LeChase Construction Services, LLC is the project’s general contractor.

Crouse expects the renovations to cost $1.5 million. The hospital is funding a majority of the work through its operations budget. Its not-for-profit fundraising organization, Crouse Health Foundation, is also helping to pay for the construction with a capital campaign.

The Crouse Breast Health Center did not shut down or relocate its operations while renovations were under way, according to Tetrault. Instead, crews planned construction in four separate phases, allowing equipment and staff members to shift as work moved to different sections of the center.

“When we flipped phases, we had to move physicians and imaging stations in a very short time frame to allow work to continue,” Tetrault says. “There was a lot of coordination with the end users, the general contractors, and ourselves.”

Crews are also on pace to perform about 60 percent of the renovations between the hours of 6 p.m. and 3 a.m., Tetrault adds. Crouse wanted a majority of the project to be done as shift work to maintain as quiet of an environment as possible during the Breast Health Center’s hours of operation, he says.

The Crouse Breast Health Center is staffed by 11 radiologists. It has a total of 20 staff members, including receptionists, patient-access personnel, mammography technicians, ultrasound technicians, and breast-health navigators. The center hired three breast-health navigators during the duration of the construction.

About 12,000 patients visit the center annually. It is not Crouse’s only facility in the Central New York Medical Center. The hospital also operates an outpatient imaging center and prompt care in the building.

Crouse Hospital, a private, not-for-profit hospital, is located at 736 Irving Ave. in Syracuse. It is licensed for 506 acute-care beds and 57 bassinets. The hospital employs 2,700 people and serves over 23,000 inpatients, 66,000 emergency-services patients, and more than 250,000 outpatients per year from 15 counties in Central New York and Northern New York.         

 

Contact Seltzer at rseltzer@cnybj.com

Rick Seltzer

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