Tibor Rubin VA Medical Center Campus - Long Beach
The Tibor Rubin Veterans Affairs Medical Center Campus at Long Beach offers comprehensive inpatient, outpatient and extended care programs to more than 50,000 veterans in the Long Beach area.
To provide even greater care, the Tibor Rubin VA Medical Center Campus project includes two separate two-story buildings for behavioral and mental health, an 80,000-square-foot Outpatient Facility, and a 40-bed, 82,000-square-foot Inpatient Facility.
The project also includes a 181,000-square-foot Community Living Center that will provide a residential living complex consisting of 10 patient living units. Each patient unit has 12-bed residential units, which includes one bariatric room, kitchen, dining room, living room (in a Great Room concept), bathing suite and quiet room.
Other construction improvements include a three-story parking structure with 491-spaces and surface parking.
San Diego Healthcare System
The Department of Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System project includes construction of a new Spinal Cord Injury/Community Living Center, a parking structure, and structural and nonstructural renovations.
The San Diego Healthcare System serves the health care needs of more than 116,500 veterans in San Diego and Imperial counties.
The Spinal Cord Injury/Community Living Center is a 197,000-square-foot, four-story standalone structure. It will include private inpatient rooms, and an outpatient and therapy clinics.
The construction and completion of a new 916-car parking structure allows patients to get to and from appointments with ease.
Structural and nonstructural improvements will be made to meet seismic standards.
Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System
The Department of Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System provides health care, trains America’s future health care providers and conducts important medical research. It provides critical health care and services to more than 84,000 veterans, warfighters and their families annually.
To continue to meet and provide the necessary health care and services to veterans, the Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System project includes the design and construction of a new 450,000-square-foot critical care center, a new central utility plant, and related site utilities that include tunnels for automated guided vehicles.
The Department of Veterans Affairs has submitted a funding request of $1.4 billion for this work, which is targeted to start in fiscal year 2025. Working through an interagency agreement, USACE and Southern California Edison will coordinate to ensure power is ready and available for construction of the critical care center.