Behavioral Health Services Center Breaks Ground in San Jose

By HCO Staff

SAN JOSE, Calif.— The new Child, Adolescent, and Adult Behavioral Health Services Center at Santa Clara Valley Medical Center (SCVMC) has celebrated the groundbreaking for the primary phase of construction. Designed by national, interdisciplinary architectural and engineering firm HGA, the facility will consolidate Santa Clara County’s behavioral health offerings, including Emergency Psychiatric Services and Urgent Care in one location when it opens to serve patients in Fall of 2025.

It will be the first County-operated inpatient facility specifically for children and adolescents in need of behavioral health care and will include a separate floor for adults. The three-story, 207,000-square-foot healthcare destination will also provide space for the county to expand its services to meet the growing demand for high-quality behavioral healthcare for residents and surrounding communities.

Located on the west side of the SCVMC campus at 751 S. Bascom Avenue, the Child, Adolescent, and Adult Behavioral Health Services Center will offer world-class behavioral health facilities for multi-generational patients in a safe and therapeutic environment. Key spaces within the complex will include a 77-bed inpatient behavioral health hospital that will accommodate adults and minors on different floors, separate outpatient urgent care for minors and adults, emergency psychiatric services (EPS) with separate secured ambulance entry bays and treatment spaces for minors and adults, as well as a shared pharmacy.

Additional spaces will include administrative offices, a pedestrian skyway bridge connecting to the existing emergency department and a new, 700-car parking structure.

“This is the kind of acute care facility we’ve long needed in Santa Clara County for young people in crisis — a sanctuary where they can safely begin to heal, close to home,” said County Supervisor Joe Simitian, who chairs the County’s Health and Hospital Committee and who first proposed the new facility in June 2015. “It’s clearly better for these kids to be close to their community when they’re in crisis — close to their family, their friends, and their own local health mental health providers. This is about troubled teens at risk of doing damage to themselves or others; this is about families, struggling through the hardest thing they’ll ever face, and being torn apart at precisely the time they need to be together,” said Simitian. “This goes to the heart of community health and wellness.”

With this new facility, SCVMC will expand its current adult behavioral health programs on the campus to include co-located outpatient and inpatient services for children and adolescents in an age-appropriate treatment environment. The building will enable a reduction of overcrowding in the EPS unit as well as provide proper zoning and sizing of the inpatient bed units with expanded bed capacity and access to the outdoors for patients on all levels.

HGA is working alongside the County of Santa Clara to develop a comprehensive facility that meets its vision for a safe and welcoming environment where families can feel assured that their loved ones are supported across a continuum of care, all in one setting. Working to bring this new facility to operation as quickly as possible, within a compressed design and construction schedule, HGA met with multiple, diverse user groups three days per week throughout the design phases to facilitate efficient decision-making and to progress the design with minimal changes.

HGA researchers engaged early in the process to set up a research platform to study the impact of improved patient privacy and access to outdoors on patient behavior and the need for restraint. Accordingly, the design of the new facility prioritizes connection to nature by including separate and distinct outdoor activity and recreation spaces for each inpatient unit as well as for Emergency Psychiatric Services. To help lower stress for patients and staff, the design includes the use of recliners located in a quiet zone, to create a restful and calming environment with a sense of privacy for patients who often stay up to 24 hours in EPS. Staff and patient safety were also important drivers of the design. For example, in addition to the ligature-resistant design features required for behavioral health facilities, HGA has designed spaces to allow for maximum visibility of the patients at all times.

“We understand effective design decisions can significantly enhance patient well-being and improve outcomes by providing the best possible environment for healing,” said Craig McInroy, principal at HGA. “It is an honor to partner with Valley Medical Center to design this new facility in order to meet the rapidly changing behavioral health needs of the community.”

The new Behavioral Health Services Center replaces the Barbara Ahrens Pavilion and Don Lowe Pavilion which formerly housed the adult inpatient units, adult EPS, and Mental Health Urgent Care. The design of the new Behavioral Health Services Center adheres to the strong modern language of the existing campus context, but also employs sustainable and biophilic design strategies to bring a natural and humane environment to the sensitive behavioral health population. These strategies include the incorporation of nature through multiple recreation yards and view gardens, large-scale biophilic graphics, large day-lit interior spaces and the use of natural materials like terracotta tile exterior cladding, high-performance glazing and exterior sunshades.

The HGA project team comprised members of HGA’s San Francisco office in collaboration with research and behavioral health experts from around the firm including Craig McInroy, principal; Craig Blackhurst, senior project manager and architect of record; Stephanie Sunseri, project manager; Michael Moores, HCAI specialist and architect of record; Ida Brown, project architect; Angela Falla, project architect; Kevin Day, project designer; Aaron Mullins, designer; and Heather Bachman, interior design lead and medical planning liaison.

Additional project collaborators included The Cuningham Group, associate architect and medical planner; contractors Webcor, SBay Construction, and Thompson Builders; Arup, structural, mechanical, electrical and plumbing engineers, daylighting and lighting design services; Sandis, civil engineer; Charles M. Salter Associates, Inc., acoustical services; Royston, Hanamoto, Alley & Abbey (RHAA), landscape architect; Criterion Systems, equipment planning; TEECOM, telecom services; Clearstory, signage and wayfinding; Lerch Bates Inc., elevator/vertical transportation, Chandra Cerrito / Art Advisor, art consultant; and PeopleSpace, furniture consultant.

The project is designed to achieve LEED Gold certification upon completion and is one of the first psychiatric facilities in the State of California to be designed to a new State regulatory category, OSHPD 5, for Inpatient Behavioral Health.