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Posted Oct 3, 2022, 2:53 AM
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Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: Albuquerque, NM
Posts: 759
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KOB-TV today had a look and conversation about the progress and plans for the new UNM Hospital tower as part of its Eye on New Mexico series. They conducted the interview and program near the construction site with a nice view of the new tower behind them. I haven't had time to watch the entire program, I've just skimmed through it. Forgive me if they say something like the entire 12 floors will be built and I missed it, lol
https://www.kob.com/new-mexico/albuq...ospital-tower/
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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — A new tower at UNM Hospital has been under construction since early 2021.
On this week’s edition of Eye on New Mexico, Spencer Schacht discusses the plan for the critical care tower and what patients can expect after the project is completed in 2024.
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Gallan95 over at SSC yesterday posted a snap from the new tower's construction cam and noted that work on the 9th and final level had just begun. I commented that I keep hoping that UNM will announce that they will go ahead and build the entire 12-floor structure all at once. I also noted that the construction cam had to be adjusted upwards recently to capture the new floors. As you can also see, the old parking structure has been completely demolished and it looks like work is getting ready to start on construction of the new skybridges linking the new tower to the existing hospital.
Here's the most recent snap from the construction cam. It shows a night-time view where you can see how they often light up the site and cranes. Work seems to be going on 'round the clock at the site. They've really made lots of progress in the last couple of months since I last posted an update.
Below are a few pics of the UNMH construction site that I never got around to posting when I first found them. They were taken back in August while the old parking garage was still being demolished.
https://www.instagram.com/p/ChGWQwPpqx8/
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/cynth...73497856-Ggn7/
Here's a nighttime picture from the end of August showing one of the construction cranes with its lighting.
https://www.instagram.com/p/Chq0iQtsntA/
A groundbreaking ceremony was held by UNM on Monday just north of the new hospital tower for the Behavioral Health Crisis Center. It's a joint project with Bernalillo County, part of the homeless and mental health funding initiative that was passed by voters several years ago.
https://hsc.unm.edu/news/2022/09/ber...is-center.html
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Bernalillo County, in partnership with The University of New Mexico Hospital (UNMH) is set to break ground on the long-awaited Behavioral Health Crisis Center.
A groundbreaking celebration is planned for Monday, Sept. 26, from 11a.m.-12:30 p.m. next to the UNM Psychiatric Center, 2400 Marble Avenue NE.
The project is funded in part by a behavioral health initiative tax passed by Bernalillo County voters in 2014 to meet the serious need for additional mental health services in the county.
The revenues from this tax have enabled the county to implement a variety of mental health service initiatives over the past few years. Now the county is partnering with UNMH to bring one of the centerpieces of the plan to fruition.
The UNM Psychiatric Center at UNMH is the largest community mental health provider in the state, providing a full spectrum of behavioral health care to thousands of New Mexicans each year. These include psychiatric emergency services, inpatient acute care, the psychiatric urgent care clinic and addiction treatment, as well as a range of outpatient mental health services.
The UNM Psychiatric Center, together with UNM Children’s Psychiatric Center, provides one of the largest continuums of behavioral health care in the Southwest.
Construction planning for the Behavioral Health Crisis Center began in July 2022 as a joint project that will allow Bernalillo County and UNMH to address existing discontinuities in behavioral health care in New Mexico.
“This is definitely a win-win-win situation,” said Bernalillo County Manager Julie Morgas Baca.
“Bernalillo County, UNMH and the public are all coming together on a long-awaited project offering best practices in behavioral health care for our residents. This county project is delivering on a promise, using $20 million in county funds and a $20 million match from UNMH, for construction and continued operation of a centralized behavioral health care facility.”
UNMH CEO Kate Becker said the new facility will help bridge an existing gap in the levels of care for behavioral health patients in the Albuquerque area.
“Right now, we have many people who do not meet inpatient admission criteria,” Becker said. “The Behavioral Health Crisis Center will help patients who are not acute enough to be in the hospital, but still need more support than just regular outpatient care.”
Morgas Baca and Becker also cited the expansion of the Psychiatric Emergency Department, the increased capacity for pediatric patients and a more defined area for law enforcement to drop off patients as additional benefits of the center.
This new facility will comprise 48,699 square feet and sit adjacent to the UNM Psychiatric Center.
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UNM is also hoping that voters next month will pass the funding for the new home of the Fine Arts program. This past week they outlined the funding that they hope to receive for various projects at the main campus and their branch campuses across the state. I've included the descriptions of the two projects in Albuquerque below, but information about the others is available at the link.
https://news.unm.edu/news/unm-seeks-...e-of-go-bond-3
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This year voters in New Mexico have the opportunity to vote on General Obligation Bond 3 which is designed to help provide funding for statewide higher education institutions to finance projects including building upgrades and renovations.
New Mexico voters will find GO Bond 3 for Higher Education on the ballot to help provide New Mexico’s colleges, universities, and specialty schools with the ability to ensure students have the tools and resources necessary to be successful.
GO Bond 3 will provide more than $215 million in higher education funding, including $89.2 million for The University of New Mexico and its branch campuses. The passing of GO Bond 3 will not only provide more than 33 colleges and universities with access to the latest in training and teaching tools but will also create more than 2,000 new jobs in 20 communities throughout the state without raising taxes.
Institutional bonds are debt commitments that allow the University to make investments in large capital projects, similar to what private citizens do when they buy a home and take on a mortgage. Universities use this financial tool in order to fund large brick-and-mortar projects and can serve as matching funds to other sources to fully fund large building projects. Typically, there are no tax increases associated with GO Bond 3.
If passed this November, GO Bond 3 will fund six projects amongst UNM’s north campus, main campus and branch campuses.
The projects include:
Center for Collaborative Arts ($45 million)
The proposed Center for Collaborative Arts & Technology (CCAT) will reduce the space College of Fine Arts (CFA) which now occupies 13 separate buildings, consolidate its space to support student success, and create a more efficient, cost-effective, and sustainable use of space in both energy usage and economically. The estimate includes new construction of a multi-story building with technical and equipment labs and performance spaces for Music and Theater, Art and Technologies, and Fine Arts education.
To remain competitive with peer fine and studio art colleges in the southwest in recruiting and retaining students and faculty and to be able to grow New Mexico's workforce in the film, music, and other creative arts industries, the College of Fine Arts must offer the technology and facilities that are necessary for these practices. Students and faculty need instruction, research, rehearsal, and performance space with appropriate ventilation, sound systems, light, and acoustics, depending on each specialized art program.
A state-of-the-art fine arts facility is not only integral to UNM's recruitment strategies to grow enrollment, but it is also essential for promoting retention through centralized student activities and services that support student success. Additionally, establishing a collegiate climate where a student can meet with faculty and collaborate with classmates in a safe and inclusive space provides for improvements in attendance, achievement, retention, and eventual graduation.
Children’s Psychiatric Center ($36 million)
The proposed University of New Mexico Hospitals Children’s Psychiatric Center will be located on UNM’s north campus and will renew the current facility to enable intensive, modern partial hospitalization capabilities on our campus, upgrade the programming and state-wide telehealth support to patients and their families in their communities and provide the physicians and equipment to facilitate concentrated specialty care in facilities located outside Albuquerque.
Children benefit from personalized care that may include inpatient, residential or partial hospitalization (day) programs. The current center is almost 50 years old and consists of a 35-bed cottage-style hospital and adolescent inpatient unit. The facility is spaced out and requires more staff and coverage spread across multiple facilities. It is currently the only facility in New Mexico affiliated with an academic medical center.
UNM Children's Psychiatric Center provides intensive behavioral health care for children and adolescents through age 17. Children benefit from personalized care that may include inpatient, residential or partial hospitalization (day) programs at the center. UNM Children's Psychiatric Center is the only facility in New Mexico affiliated with an academic medical center, and the only center in the state that cares for children with serious emotional disturbances—regardless of a family's ability to pay.
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Another recent project at UNM is the Central and Girard gateway that got underway in July. This project will replace the old structures that were town down back in 2020. It's expected to be completed by the middle of next month.
http://news.unm.edu/news/unm-site-im...irard-to-begin
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Construction work to transform a highly visible address bounding UNM’s main campus, the northwest corner of Central Ave. and Girard Blvd., will begin construction on Monday, July 25.
“The Central/Girard intersection is a visual gateway to campus, providing welcome for visitors traveling westbound on Route 66 and Central Avenue,” said Amy Coburn, UNM university architect and director of Planning, Design & Construction. “The northwest corner of the intersection serves as a entry for students, faculty, staff, and community members who access public transportation or walk between campus and the adjacent neighborhoods and retail establishments.”
The existing site has poor visibility, and deteriorating infrastructure, and, until the recent demolition of the wall structures last year, was beset by criminal activity.
“The site improvements will remove visual barriers, replace deteriorating infrastructure, and install an interlocking ‘UNM’ identity marker, which will welcome visitors to campus,” said Coburn.
The Associated Students of the University of New Mexico (ASUNM), a passionate stakeholder in the development of these site improvements, were awarded $400,000 funding for this project from the NM State Legislature via House Bill 349, which passed in 2020. UNM Facilities Management contributed $29,190 towards this project, bringing the overall project investment to $429,140.
The Central & Girard site improvement project is designed for approximately 11,246 gross square feet of construction and landscaping improvements. Construction, which starts in late July, is expected to extend over four months with an estimated completion date in mid-November.
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Here are pics of the old structures that were torn down.
http://news.unm.edu/news/demolition-...ral-and-girard
An interesting thing to note is that the Solar Arc public art piece at 4-H Park originally used to be located at this spot, right at the corner between the wall structures. I have memories of it being there when I was little and I'm unsure of when it was removed to the park at 12th and Menaul. I assume it was sometime in the early to mid-90s.
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