Large Institutional Cancer Care Center – Bed Tower Expansion

Size

140,000 SF, 3-Floor Expansion

Highlights

Patient, Isolation and Reception Rooms, Break Rooms, Offices

Services Provided

MEP Engineering

Since 2010, Teliosity has been a trusted partner to this healthcare client, delivering MEP engineering and technology design services across a wide range of projects.

For this project, Teliosity served as the MEP engineer on the three-floor build-out of Levels 20, 21, and 22 in the Inpatient Bed Tower. These three floors, each approximately 47,300 SF, were originally constructed as part of a vertical expansion and left in a shelled condition.

As part of the design-build team, our role was to engineer MEP systems that aligned with the layout and functionality of the existing patient care floors (Levels 15–19), while also incorporating lessons learned from those prior phases. The build-out included patient rooms, isolation rooms, reception/consult areas, family waiting spaces, equipment alcoves, clean/soiled linen storage, staff workrooms, break rooms, and offices.

A key challenge of this project was coordinating construction phasing to avoid disruption of critical utilities and ensure the tower remained fully operational throughout construction — a goal successfully achieved through careful planning and collaboration.

Bed Tower Expansion

Since 2010, Teliosity has been a trusted partner to this healthcare client, delivering MEP engineering and technology design services across a wide range of projects.

For this project, Teliosity served as the MEP engineer on the three-floor build-out of Levels 20, 21, and 22 in the Inpatient Bed Tower. These three floors, each approximately 47,300 SF, were originally constructed as part of a vertical expansion and left in a shelled condition.

As part of the design-build team, our role was to engineer MEP systems that aligned with the layout and functionality of the existing patient care floors (Levels 15–19), while also incorporating lessons learned from those prior phases. The build-out included patient rooms, isolation rooms, reception/consult areas, family waiting spaces, equipment alcoves, clean/soiled linen storage, staff workrooms, break rooms, and offices.

A key challenge of this project was coordinating construction phasing to avoid disruption of critical utilities and ensure the tower remained fully operational throughout construction — a goal successfully achieved through careful planning and collaboration.