66°F
weather icon Mostly Cloudy

Healthcare Panel talks about future of down town Medical Arts District

The June 2020 Southern Nevada CCIM Healthcare Panel shared insightful knowledge regarding how Las Vegas responded to COVID-19, commercial real estate growth plans in the Medical Arts District and navigating the future through COVID-19. The health care panel had three leaders as panelists: K. Warren Volker, M.D., Ph.D., M.S., is the chief clinical officer with Intermountain Healthcare, Nevada; Marcia Turner, Ph.D., is the chief administrative officer with University Medical Center of Southern Nevada (UMC Hospital); and Bill Arent is the director of Economic and Urban Development Department with the city of Las Vegas.

Q: What is Intermountain Healthcare, UMC Hospital and the city of Las Vegas Development Department’s vision for Las Vegas Medical Arts District?

A: The city of Las Vegas has been focused on improving downtown Las Vegas. The Las Vegas Medical Arts District is part of our downtown. There is a core health district between 214 core acres of land in the LVMA District including: UMC Hospital, Valley Hospital, UNLV Medical School, UNLV Dental School and the UNLV Nursing School. They are long term looking to build out the Medical Arts District to become a core destination. They are looking to combine parcels of land for development, an incentive for increasing density, encouraging mixed use, developing urban corridors, improving transit such as biking, multimobile transit and upgrading parking through shared assets in the Medical Arts District.

Q: COVID 19 – How did Las Vegas respond?

A: UMC Hospital is the front line for our city for COVID-19. It has ramped up its testing capacity since March from 100 tests a day to the current capacity of 10,000 COVID-19 tests per day. UMC took an existing area of the hospital that was dedicated to physical therapy and relocated it. This area of the hospital was utilized to expand testing capacity to the 10,000 COVID-19 tests. It has partnered with many employers such as MGM Grand, Wynn Resorts and Zappos, to offer testing to all employees prior to returning to work. The hospital has set this up at the Convention Center, which allows them to maintain appropriate social distancing. It is also holding COVID-19 general public testing at UNLV and Texas Station.

Dr. Volker stated that, “We received our first COVID-19 case on March 6. Following Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and John Hopkins protocols, Intermountain Healthcare worked quickly to open up a drive-up testing center here in Southern Nevada and in Utah on March 20. PPE (personal protective equipment) was an issue but we went to great length to secure these and provide them to their physicians, nurses and all of our health care workers.”

Q: How was the Oct. 1 instrumental in Las Vegas being prepared for COVID-19?

A: Turner stated, “We realized (it) after we kicked into gear by opening up our emergency command center, our integrative command center, preparing the hospital by segregating the COVID-19 area(s), EMS system to clean the rooms, infectious disease folks and government entities. We stepped back and said this is the one positive thing that came from the horrible Oct. 1 event. We are more connected; we are more nimble and we are ready to kick into high gear because the Oct. 1 incident wasn’t that long ago. We learned a lot from that incident. It was almost a muscle memory of our health care system we put in place here in Las Vegas. The Nevada Hospital Association was all coming together and knew what to do. Our citizens benefited from this.”

Q: What is the long-term vision of the medical arts district?

A: The revenue that is projected to come into the Medical Arts District is estimated at more than $3 billion dollars by 2030. There is a long-term plan to support the UNLV School of Medicine, which has purchased some property south of the planned Medical Education Building. The District is working with the UNLV School of Medicine and the other providers in the District to see how they utilize this land to provide the much needed parking along with a possible mixed-use project with additional medical office and retail. District organizers see a big demand throughout the region for new housing and multi-family projects. The city of Las Vegas has projects within the Medical Arts Districts current improvement plan that are in excess of $80 million. The timeline of these projects range from Oct. 2020 to Dec. 2023.

Arent states, “The city of Las Vegas has a mass transit coming from the airport and UNLV into downtown and merging into the Medical Arts District. There is also a plan for a bus rapid transit project as part of the Maryland VRT Project of 2024.

“Development opportunities in the future inside the Medical Arts District are available in medical office and multi-family. The expansion of the UNLV School of Medicine, UNLV School of Dental and UNLV Nursing will demand more product in these areas,” he said.

The Medical Arts District is in the West Central Submarket. The average rental rate for Quarter 2 is $2.06 per square feet, full service gross. The vacancy rate in Quarter 2 is 6.8 percent, which is lower than the valley average of 10.6 percent.

Q: Will there be a second wave of covid19 in the fall?

A: Dr. Volker states: “We are in the midst of this, still. COVID-19 is a Covid virus, it’s a SARS virus. COVID-19 is four times more contagious than the common flu. It was expected that rates would go up as we are bringing people together and we are increasing testing. In the fall it is also flu and cold season. We don’t need to live in fear. We need to be smart. Most people do well when they get the COVID-19. We need to be careful for our immune-compromised population. It is promising that we will have a vaccine around the end of the year to the first quarter of 2020.”

Alexia Crowley, CCIM, NV Real Estate License No. 0049334, is an associate vice president at Colliers International, Las Vegas. She is Las Vegas-based commercial real estate agent specializing in the acquisition and disposition of health care real estate. She has worked in commercial real estate for more than 18 years. She has been a medical practice manager for more than 17 years.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Celebrate Earth Day weekend at Downtown Summerlin

Downtown Summerlin, the dynamic urban center of the Summerlin master-planned community, will host two events Earth Day weekend to formally mark the occasion, while promoting overall wellness.

Cadence offers quick move-in options

Looking to be in your dream home in as little as 30 to 60 days? With Cadence’s quick move-in choices, you’ll spend less time dreaming of a new home and more time loving your new space.

Trilogy Sunstone to debut new home models

The community of Trilogy Sunstone in northwest portion of the Las Vegas Valley just introduced three new model homes from the limited-series Modern Collection.

Crested Canyon in Summerlin nears sell-out

Crested Canyon by Taylor Morrison, a single-family home neighborhood, is nearing sell-out with only a few homes remaining. Located in the Kestrel district of Summerlin West, just west of the 215 and Lake Mead Drive and south of the village of Reverence, available Crested Canyon homes span 2,242 square feet, priced from the mid-$700,000s.

Summerlin introduces new urban trail design

Today, Summerlin land planners will incorporate another novel approach to transportation via an urban trail design to expand access for cyclists and pedestrians connecting them to a future planned urban center in Summerlin West.

Tour de Summerlin returns April 20

Tour de Summerlin, Southern Nevada’s longest running cycling event, returns to the community April 20. Presented by Howard Hughes, developer of Summerlin and Downtown Summerlin, Tour de Summerlin is expected to draw more than 500 cyclists.

First look at Cello Tower in Symphony Park

Origin at Symphony Park, the new mixed-use development by Red Ridge Development, has unveiled a first look inside Cello Tower.

Lennar showcases Hampton in Cadence

Hampton, Lennar’s newest neighborhood at Cadence, has officially started selling. Hampton features three floor plans, including the Rhett, Ramsey and Reid — town homes with versatile spaces.

Summerlin offers ready-to-move-in homes

The master-planned community of Summerlin offers nearly 100 unique floor plans in approximately 20 neighborhoods throughout nine distinct villages and districts. Homes are available in a variety of styles — from single-family homes to town homes, priced from the $400,000s to more than $1 million. For those looking for quick or immediate occupancy, there are dozens of homes in a variety of styles and price points that are move-in-ready or will be completed within a few months.