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OHSU Center for Health & Healing

Coordinates: 45°29′56″N 122°40′17″W / 45.4988°N 122.6713°W / 45.4988; -122.6713
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OHSU Center for Health and Healing
The OHSU Center for Health & Healing in 2009
OHSU Center for Health & Healing is located in Portland, Oregon
OHSU Center for Health & Healing
Location in Portland
General information
TypeMedical Facility
Location3303 Southwest Bond Avenue
Portland, Oregon
Coordinates45°29′56″N 122°40′17″W / 45.4988°N 122.6713°W / 45.4988; -122.6713
Completed2006
Cost$140 million
OwnerOregon Health & Science University
ManagementCB Richard Ellis
Technical details
Floor count16
Floor area412,000 sq ft (38,300 m2)
Design and construction
Architect(s)GBD Architects
DeveloperGerding Edlen
Main contractorHoffman Construction
Website
www.ohsu.edu/visit/center-health-healing-building-1
References
[1]

Oregon Health & Science University's (OHSU) Center for Health & Healing is a 412,000-square-foot (38,300 m2) medical building in the South Waterfront district of Portland, Oregon.[1] It is connected to the main OHSU campus on Marquam hill by the Portland Aerial Tram.[2]

History

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The OHSU Center for Health & Healing was completed in 2006, designed by GBD Architects and constructed by Hoffman Construction.[3] It took 3 years to complete, with construction beginning in 2003, and cost a total of $140 million.[1][4] In February 2007, the building was granted LEED Platinum status, becoming the largest health care facility in the United States to earn LEED's highest rating.[2]

Details

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Of the facility’s 16 floors, eight floors are dedicated to physician practice, surgery, and imaging; three floors house the March Wellness Fitness Center; four are home to education and research facilities; and the ground level contains an optical shop, a pharmacy, and a café.[1][5] The building is 61.58 m (202.0 ft) tall.[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Staff. "OHSU Center for Health & Healing: A Post-Occupancy Evaluation" (PDF). Betterbricks.
  2. ^ a b Gragg, Randy (October 2007). "Case Study: Center For Health And Healing". GreenSource.
  3. ^ Goldfield, Robert (July 7, 2010). "OHSU building snags major award". Portland Business Journal. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
  4. ^ Staff. "OHSU History". OHSU.
  5. ^ Staff. "March Wellness Fitness Center". OHSU.
  6. ^ "Center for Health & Healing". Buildings. Emporis GMBH. Archived from the original on May 12, 2015. Retrieved 21 November 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
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