Health Care Integris Canadian Valley preps for major expansion
October 17, 2007
YUKON – Business at Integris Canadian Valley Regional Hospital is booming. And that’s a surprise to nobody affiliated with the hospital or its parent company.
The hospital will undergo a $27 million expansion beginning next spring and the entire project will take about 1.5 years to complete. It’s the second major metro area project Integris has an eye on this week. On Monday officials told of their plans for a $30 million-$60 million hospital at Interstate 35 and SE 15th Street in Edmond. The 30- to 60-bed facility is contingent on how the congregation of Henderson Hills Baptist Church votes. The church will decide if it wants to sell 24.5 acres of its land to Integris.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the metro, just about everything is looking up at the 6-year-old Canadian Valley Regional Hospital.“We actually kind of anticipated growth,” said Stanley Hupfeld, Integris Health president and chief executive officer. “The Yukon and Mustang area is a great area with a good economy and lots of growth.”
When Canadian Valley opened in 2001, there was plenty of room left for growth.“We started off modestly, and with hospitals, if the demand grows, so does everything else,” he said. “We anticipated it and had additional land. And it’s not the end of the line there. We will probably have more expansion. I can see it having 150 beds 10 years from now.
”Integris Canadian Valley President James Moore said all’s well on the south side of Yukon.“It’s going very well here in respect to development,” Moore said. “This will grant us about 40,000 square feet of new space. Plus we will have 12,000 square feet of renovated space.”The expansion will feature a new emergency department. The Canadian Valley ER will go from four beds to 18 beds, and there will be four intensive care unit beds added, which will bring the total to eight. Moore said the hospital is up to about 20,000 ER visits per year.The east wing will have an additional floor built that will increase beds from 30 to 60, he said. Hupfeld said Yukon and Edmond are similar in growth and future.“Edmond has had tremendous growth and expansion; we’ve been thinking about it for years,” he said.
Bookmarks