A
new hospital taking shape in Joplin, Mo., with an exterior of masonry,
precast concrete, and specially made windows, may be the first hospital
in the country designed from the outset to protect patients, visitors
and staff from the effects of a catastrophic tornado.
The new hospital, to be called Mercy
Hospital Joplin, is owned by the Missouri-based nonprofit Mercy Health
System and will replace the old St. John’s Regional Medical Center. The
old medical center was destroyed in the historic tornado that hit Joplin
on May 22, 2011. That EF5-rated tornado was one of the most powerful
tornadoes ever recorded, killing 162 people – including five
critical-care patients and one visitor at the hospital.
In designing and building the $350
million replacement hospital, John Farnen, executive director of
strategic projects for Mercy Health System, the sixth-largest Catholic
health care system in America, identified multiple lessons from the
catastrophic tornado. One of the most important was to have a hardened
exterior for walls and windows.
During the tornado, the building’s
exterior covering and windows failed to withstand the wind and debris of
the tornado. The hospital’s exterior at that time was mostly glass;
some metal panels; and precast concrete on the main hospital with some
exterior insulation finishing system (EIFS), a lightweight synthetic
cladding meant to look like stucco. There also was EIFS on the adjacent
office buildings.
“When you walked around the areas of the
hospital that used EIFS, you could see glass shards stuck in it and
pieces of two X fours that had penetrated it,” Farnen says. “Some debris
can go right through it.
“The new facility will not be covered
with EIFS in any of the patient care areas,” Farnen adds. “Exteriors in
those areas will either be reinforced concrete, stone and brick, or
precast concrete. The entire exterior skin will be made of a harder
material, which will prevent the kind of exterior damage we saw at the
old hospital and help prevent the kind of serious interior damage that
led to chaos and injuries.”
Farnen says the first and second floors
of the new hospital will have exteriors of hand-laid brick. Above those
levels the exterior will be precast concrete with brick veneer. He said
they would have used hand-laid brick for the upper levels, too, but had
to go with the precast concrete in order to meet the project’s
compressed timetable. The new 900,000-square-foot, nine-story hospital
is expected to be completed in early 2015.
“Brick and stone is just a lot better
look,” Farnen says. “Not only does it hold up better in severe weather,
but you just can’t beat the look of brick and stone. So, you get a great
look and better protection.”
Another lesson learned was to harden and protect backup power sources, and masonry plays a key role in that, too.
“Losing power created a lot of problems
for us,” Farnen says. “When the tornado hit, the transformers that
provide normal power to the facility were lost almost immediately. So,
there was no power of any kind inside the hospital, not even for
critical-care areas.
“The new facility will have a separate,
central utility plant that will be housed in a hardened structure with
storm doors,” he continues. “That structure will be partially buried,
and mainly built with reinforced masonry block and brick.”
Farnen also notes that the hardened
exterior is no budget buster. It adds only 2 percent to 3 percent to the
construction costs. Going forward, he says, Mercy will apply the
lessons learned in Joplin to all the new facilities it builds in its
four-state service area. Indeed, near the new Mercy Hospital Joplin, the
health system plans to break ground next year for a separate behavioral
health hospital and a rehabilitation hospital. These also will have the
tornado-resistant features.
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