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News | 6 min read

VCU plans to build $350m children’s hospital

February 11, 2019

Officials at Virginia Commonwealth University Health System and Childrenโ€™s Hospital of Richmond at VCU announced plans to build a new inpatient childrenโ€™s facility that will be adjacent to the outpatient Childrenโ€™s Pavilion on the VCU Medical Center campus in downtown Richmond.

The project will complete the Childrenโ€™s Pavilion as a comprehensive, integrated health care facility exclusively for childrenโ€™s inpatient and outpatient care. The new facility will replace the existing pediatric inpatient unit with private rooms and also will provide new operating rooms, imaging capacity, emergency services and family amenities โ€” all dedicated to children and their families.

โ€œThe completion of the Childrenโ€™s Pavilion with a new inpatient hospital will provide an exclusively child-centered environment as advocated by patient families, our own pediatric team and regional childrenโ€™s health care providers,โ€ said Michael Rao, Ph.D., president of VCU and VCU Health System.

The project is part of a strategic commitment by the ChoR, VCU Health System and its board of directors to be a national leader in childrenโ€™s health โ€” and to be ranked in the top 20 by 2022, Rao said.

โ€œAll children deserve the very best care in a welcoming environment that meets the unique needs of each child and their family,โ€ said Marsha Rappley, M.D., CEO of the VCU Health System and senior vice president for health sciences at VCU. โ€œA comprehensive Childrenโ€™s Pavilion that is designed in partnership with childrenโ€™s health care providers from across the region and state, as well as with families, will give all children a focus of hope during what may be the most difficult journey of their lives.โ€

The new childrenโ€™s hospital is part of a comprehensive plan to address the needs of the community and the state, becoming a destination for children and their families seeking exceptional health care as well as a destination for research and educational opportunities.

“As a cancer survivor and beneficiary of life saving care and research at VCU, I am especially pleased to welcome VCU’s continued investment in children’s care,โ€ย said Del. Delores McQuinn, a member of the House of Delegates whose district includes the counties of Henrico and Chesterfield and the City of Richmond.ย โ€œOur children deserve the best we have to offer both in terms of care and experience โ€” and that is just what this new facility will provide for the entire region.โ€

Del. Jeff Bourne and Sen. Jennifer McClellan, two state lawmakers whose districts encompass VCUโ€™s medical center, jointly stated the benefits of the new hospital to the Richmond area: โ€œAs parents of young children, we are very pleased to hear that VCU is enhancing its already excellent pediatric environment by further integrating inpatient and outpatient care for kids toward national standing as a top childrenโ€™s hospital.โ€

Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney cited the importance of the childrenโ€™s hospital for the entire region. โ€œProviding access to world-class health care for every child, no matter their zip code or ability to pay, is the right thing to do,โ€ he said. โ€œBuilding this new facility will not simply expand our growing healthcare economy โ€” it will improve the lives and health outcomes for our children. We are proud to be home to VCU and applaud its progressive, mission-centered patient care.โ€

The facility is expected to cost more than $350 million and will include 86 licensed beds plus six observation beds relocated from the Main Hospital, with the capacity to increase to about 125 beds in the future. The new facility will continue to be operated under the VCU Medical Center hospital license.

โ€œThe community has longย awaited a hospital exclusively dedicated to the care of children,โ€ said Keith Derco, M.D., retired founder of Associates in Pediatrics andย CHoR community liaison.ย โ€œThe plan to build such a facility will ultimately unite our community and allow CHoR to enhance their ongoing efforts along the path of growth and success that I have watched over the last decade.โ€

Bruce Rubin, M.D., chair of the Department of Pediatrics in the VCU School of Medicine said, โ€œCHoR already is nationally recognized for our programs. This new childrenโ€™s hospital โ€” built just for the care of children and their families โ€” will join with our award-winning Childrenโ€™s Pavilion clinic building as the best in the commonwealth. This will help elevate the care to a new level and will be instrumental in attracting the nationโ€™s greatest talent to CHoR in our quest to be among the top 20 childrenโ€™s hospitals in the United States.โ€

Since VCU Health System and Childrenโ€™s Hospital joined in 2010 to form CHoR, the Childrenโ€™s Hospital Foundation has committed more than $90.7 million to CHoR for recruiting world-class specialists, establishing multiple specialty programs and increasing pediatric research.

โ€œFrom the beginning, our dream and goal has been to help bring the top pediatric specialists to one place, the Childrenโ€™s Hospital of Richmond at VCU,โ€ said Coleman Wortham III, chair of the Childrenโ€™s Hospital Foundation. โ€œThis new childrenโ€™s inpatient hospital attached to the very successful outpatient pavilion advances that dream to reality. This is a wonderful day for all children in Richmond, across the commonwealth, and beyond.โ€

โ€œCHoR has had tremendous growth in key areas of people, programs and places over the past decade,โ€ added CHoR CEO Elias Neujahr. โ€œThe new inpatient facility is the next phase of delivering on important promises to the state and our community to provide the best care for Virginiaโ€™s children and families, which we are doing with the invaluable help of Childrenโ€™s Hospital Foundation.โ€

Kim Hassmer, a member of the CHoR Family Advisory Network, said she and other parents are more than excited about the new hospital and what it will mean to their families:ย โ€œItโ€™s just such an overwhelming sense of weโ€™re getting there. To be able to have all of those resources accessible in one place is going to make life as a mom of a complex โ€˜kiddoโ€™ 10 times easier,โ€ she said.

Site preparation is underway to demolish the former Childrenโ€™s Pavilion building on E. Marshall Street, between 10th and 11th streets. Construction is anticipated to be underway this spring with substantial completion at the end of 2022.