
Mayo Clinic announced a $5 billion expansion plan for its flagship campus Tuesday that includes new buildings designed so they can evolve and expand as patient needs change over the coming decades.
The world renowned Mayo Clinic has a storied history dating 160 years, and with a reputation.
"Of excellence, of putting the needs of our patients first, and that value is central to the work we undertake today," said Dr. Craig Daniels at Tuesday's announcement.
Daniels says a key part of the plan is to create health neighborhoods where patients can access continuous care for services they need without needing to be shuttled between various departments.
"We will connect patients and care teams in neighborhoods where we will co-locate services around common patient needs including labs, imaging, consultations, and treatments," explained Dr. Daniels. "We'll also create unique, architectural elements and spaces to support help and healing through nature, sunlight, and connectivity."
He also says artificial intelligence and automation will streamline and enhance the patient experience.
The project is part of a Mayo strategy to transform both patient care and its campus in downtown Rochester, about 80 miles southeast of Minneapolis. This storied hospital is known for its patient care as well as scientific breakthroughs in cancer and gene therapies. It draws patients from around the world.
A key to it will be the creation of “neighborhoods” within the new facilities, where patients can go for all the services they need for their particular condition, such as cancer, without needing to be shuttled between various departments. Another component of that strategy will be integrating in-person and virtual visits, and taking advantage of artificial intelligence, including to accelerate the development of new cures.
The idea is to blur the traditional lines between inpatient and outpatient care, and between digital and in-person care, Dr. Gianrico Farrugia, Mayo's CEO, said in an interview. That requires rethinking how the buildings themselves are designed, he said.
“This is not about making a nicer facility," Farrugia said. "This is making a place that will give a better outcome.”
Announcing the project in a ceremony in Rochester Tuesday, Farrugia called it Mayo's biggest and most ambitious investment in a 160-year history of innovation. He said their vision is for more than just creating better spaces for patients and staff.
“We know that for overall health care transformation, indeed even for digital innovation to thrive in health care, we also need new types of health care buildings," he said at the ceremony attended by Gov. Tim Walz. "Across the country we’re providing 21st century care in 20th century buildings. It is simply, by far, not good enough.”
Mayo will add five new buildings with 2.4 million square feet of space as part of the project. They’ll be designed so their spaces can be easily converted to new uses when needs change, such as from patient rooms to operating rooms.
Much of that space will be in two new clinical buildings at the center of campus. Each will have nine floors but they'll be as tall as a more conventional 16-story building, and they'll be designed strong enough so that more floors could be added in the future. Skyways and tunnels will connect the new facilities with existing buildings.
“We’re not building buildings with the purpose of putting bricks and mortar together," Dr. Craig Daniels, the initiative leader, said at the ceremony. "We make this investment to continue our mission, to serve the needs of our patients by being their source of hope and healing.”
Mayo, an independent nonprofit, is funding the project with its own revenue sources as part of its long-term plans and will not ask for government money, Farrugia said in the interview. Most construction will begin in early 2024. Some facilities are expected to begin operating as early as 2028, with completion projected for 2030.
Farrugia said Mayo hopes the new facilities will "serve as an example for what a global health care facility should look like.”
Walz praised the plan, saying Mayo's investment will foster “bold innovation” that will extend “world-class health care to every corner of the globe.”
This May during the Minnesota legislative session, Mayo administrators sent an email to lawmakers threatening to pull the expansion from Minnesota. The hospital system was not supportive of two bills being debated at the that would deal with minimum nurse staffing at hospitals and establishing a healthcare advisory board and administrators.
Eventually, Mayo Clinic was given an exemption from the bills.
The Associated Press contributed to this story.