New Central Energy Plant Powers Up at VA New Orleans Medical Center
October 17, 2014
NEW ORLEANS – Clark/McCarthy Healthcare Partners achieved a major milestone on the 1.6 million square-foot Southeast Louisiana Veterans Health Care System replacement medical center achieved a major milestone in September, as the new central energy plant powered up for the first time.
The plant is the campus' first new building delivered by Clark/McCarthy Healthcare Partners.
The new medical campus will replace the existing VA hospital damaged during Hurricane Katrina. The $995 million medical center is on schedule to be complete in the spring of 2016 and the VA anticipates seeing patients in late 2016.
Prominently situated on Tulane Avenue, the more than 130,000 square-foot central energy plant will serve as the backbone of the campus, providing electrical power, chilled/steam/domestic/fire water, heating and cooling systems, and emergency back-up systems to the campus’ eight additional buildings. The facility provides enough capacity for the entire campus to operate independently of the city’s infrastructure and be self-sustaining for up to five days in case of natural disaster or federal emergency.
"With this electric service in place, permanent systems may be brought up, getting the project one step closer to controlling the environment required to complete construction," said Clark/McCarthy Healthcare Partners' Steve Maslen. "With the Central Plant now on line, Clark/ McCarthy is on track to turn over some areas of the Medical Center in 2015, which will facilitate VA’s activation."
After the electric utility company Entergy Corporation powered up the plant, the Clark/McCarthy team began testing the systems on the project. All systems are scheduled to be operational by the end of 2014. Once they are deemed ready, the central energy plant will support the already-occupied VA administrative building, which was the former Pan American Life Building.
Construction of the central energy plant began June 2012, with the driving of 755 piles for the building foundation. Like the remainder of the campus, sustainability was a key consideration and the central plant incorporates many green features. Water for the cooling towers will be supplied, in part, from rain water collected and stored onsite, protecting natural resources and helping reduce utility costs.
Clark/McCarthy Healthcare Partners, a joint venture of Clark Construction Group, LLC, and McCarthy Building Companies, Inc., is the prime construction contractor for the medical center. The project architect is StudioNOVA, a joint venture of NBBJ, Eskew, Dumez + Ripple, and Rozas-Ward Architects. Mechanical and electrical engineering for the central energy plant was performed by BR&A Consulting Engineers.