EllisDon Infrastructure has been awarded the contract for Phase 1 of B.C.’s Burnaby Hospital redevelopment.
EllisDon will build the new Keith and Betty Beedie Pavilion, expand the support facilities building to include a new energy centre and renovate existing buildings on campus. Construction is expected to begin in summer 2021. The Beedie Pavilion and expansion of the support facilities building will be complete in 2025, with renovations complete in 2027.
“The redevelopment of the Burnaby Hospital will make a real difference for the people of Burnaby – providing better health for people now and protecting people and communities from health challenges, today and into the future,” said Adrian Dix, Minister of Health. “I’m excited to announce we’ve reached this major milestone in the redevelopment, and shovels will soon be in the ground to modernize the hospital in one of our province’s fastest-growing communities.”
Phase 1 of the redevelopment will see the construction of a six-storey, 83-bed pavilion with underground parking. All patient rooms, except for one, will be single-patient, which will provide greater comfort and privacy for patients and their families. The pavilion will include a maternity and labour unit, a neonatal intensive care unit and a medical inpatient unit with negative pressure rooms and outbreak zones to isolate infectious diseases.
The pavilion will also include a new inpatient mental health and substance use unit with a secured outdoor patio. Within this unit is a five-bed crisis stabilization unit that will provide short-term inpatient care, assessment and treatment for patients in crisis, at risk or in severe distress.
Phase 1 will include an expansion of the emergency department, operating and procedure rooms and other support areas.
With funding from the province and the Burnaby Hospital Foundation, Phase 1 of the redevelopment will cost approximately $612 million.
Construction on Phase 2 of the redevelopment, which includes building the second patient-care tower with 160 beds and a new cancer treatment centre, is expected to begin in 2025, once the business plan is approved. The redevelopment will be among the province’s largest health-care investments at a cost of $1.4 billion.