Wednesday, June 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Full steam ahead for expanded Richmond Hospital

Darpan News Desk BC Government, 13 Jul, 2021 05:19 PM
  • Full steam ahead for expanded Richmond Hospital

A new state-of-the-art emergency department and intensive care unit are just two of the improvements people in Richmond will see with more services and better health care as the Province moves ahead with an approved business plan for an expanded Richmond Hospital.

“People in Richmond deserve the health care that meets the needs of a fast-growing community. When we formed government in 2017, we immediately took action on a bigger, bolder plan for improvements to Richmond Hospital,” said Premier John Horgan.  “One year ago, we were here to announce the scope of the business plan, with more beds and more surgical space, and today we’re taking another important step forward. We have approved the plan and timelines for construction on a new, modern patient care tower at the Richmond Hospital. With the largest public health investment in Richmond’s history, we’re going to deliver better and faster care for people while creating thousands of good local jobs, helping build a strong recovery for everyone.”

The four-phase project will add 113 new beds to the hospital, bringing the total to 353.

A new nine-floor patient care tower, the Yurkovich Family Pavilion, will have an emergency department with 82 spaces, up from 60, and 11 operating rooms, up from eight. There will be also more pre- and post-surgical care spaces, increasing from 26 to 69.

The tower will also include an intensive care unit; a fully equipped medical imaging department with four CT scanners and two MRIs; a pharmacy; and short-stay pediatrics.

The tower will be earthquake-safe and constructed above the flood plain. The new tower is planned to be 100% carbon neutral.  

“Work is needed at Richmond Hospital and it’s long overdue for people in this fast-growing community,” said Adrian Dix, Minister of Health. “Business plan approval is an exciting step in the process. This largest provincial capital investment to a health capital project in the city of Richmond means that we are full steam ahead with the expansion of the Richmond Hospital that will provide quality public health care to the people of Richmond for decades to come in a modern environment.”

Further improvements to the Richmond Hospital include redevelopment of the south tower to create new inpatient psychiatry and psychiatric emergency units so existing services will be in one location and brought up to modern standards. The South Tower will also have a maternity ward and neonatal intensive care unit.  

The Milan Ilich Pavilion will also be redeveloped and be home to the cancer care clinic, outpatient clinics and the UBC school of medicine.

Approximately 1,500 direct jobs and 900 indirect jobs will be created during construction. The project now proceeds to early works and procurement. Design work will begin immediately on initial renovations to the Milan Ilich Pavilion, with construction on those renovations starting in 2022 to accommodate cancer care and other services. The North Tower is expected to open to patients in 2028. South Tower and additional Milan Ilich Pavilion completion is scheduled for 2029.

The cost is approximately $860.8 million and will be shared by the provincial government through Vancouver Coastal Health and the Richmond Hospital Foundation.

MORE National ARTICLES

Fortin aims to provide more vaccine predictability

Fortin aims to provide more vaccine predictability
Maj.-Gen. Dany Fortin said 855,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine that were to have arrived last week are now in the country and distribution should wrap up Thursday. 

Fortin aims to provide more vaccine predictability

1205 COVID19 cases for Thursday

1205 COVID19 cases for Thursday
Dr. Bonnie Henry says the Vancouver Coastal region is leading all other health authorities with about 70 per cent of P.1 variant cases because of a large number of cases linked to the resort town of Whistler.

1205 COVID19 cases for Thursday

Details of revamped EI coming soon: Qualtrough

Details of revamped EI coming soon: Qualtrough
The shortcomings in EI, flagged for years by experts, have been exposed by the pandemic, including that not every worker is covered, nor can everyone who is covered get benefits when they need them.

Details of revamped EI coming soon: Qualtrough

B.C. puts $2B in affordable housing loan program

B.C. puts $2B in affordable housing loan program
Housing Minister David Eby says the financing will be provided to private developers and community groups through the province's HousingHub program, a division of BC Housing.

B.C. puts $2B in affordable housing loan program

Deal reached to finance Montreal airport rail link

Deal reached to finance Montreal airport rail link
The project was in jeopardy after the airport authority, which was supposed to finance the station, lost hundreds of millions of dollars in revenues after the COVID-19 pandemic crippled the airline industry.

Deal reached to finance Montreal airport rail link

Canada turns focus to buying COVID-19 boosters

Canada turns focus to buying COVID-19 boosters
Canada expects to get every adult vaccinated fully — with both doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna or Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines or one shot of the single-dose Johnson & Johnson — by the end of September at the latest.

Canada turns focus to buying COVID-19 boosters