CplKlinger
Senior Member
It's been a hot minute since I went through the planning documents, but I think they preferred something more horizontal than vertical because if it's smaller but taller then it can take longer to get between areas or respond to codes because you have to go between floors more often, and also some complimentary functions might be on different floors. I could be remembering something wrong but I think that was the general gist of it.I can understand the location choice, but it's definitely rooted in suburban car centric thinking. A hospital does not need to spread out this much, you can build up instead of wide.
Yep, this is sort of the Goldilocks site for them: not on the north campus where it'd cause further issues with traffic parking, future campus development, etc., but close enough to the existing hospital that it'd be relatively quick and simple to drive between the two sites.Well the University of Alberta for starters…
For folks worried about the political element here, let me put it this way: the site options (there were more than half a dozen) were scored and ranked with a weighted criteria, and this was one of the highest scoring options. The politics didn't away the location - the thing to watch for will be the budget (likely 2027) to see how well they fund the construction. The capital funding will determine how capable this will be as a hospital and research centre.
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