16.05.2022
The largest amount of work has been accomplished at Polyclinic #7 on Proletarskaya Street. Concreting work in the basement and first floors of the five-story building is 100% completed. About half of the volume of concrete has been poured on the second and third floors, and the construction of the fourth-floor frame has started. Reinforcement, formwork and floor slab concreting at the 2nd and 3rd-floor levels, as well as 2nd, 3rd and 4th-floor columns are underway. The polyclinic is designed for 920 visits per shift, with about 50,000 people in its service area.
Concreting work in the basement and the first floor of the Polyclinic #27 building on Yerevanskaya Street has been 100% completed, and on the 2nd floor - 75% completed. Basement and first-floor reinforcing cages are 62% completed. The seven-story building is designed to receive 658 patients per shift, with approximately 30,000 people in its service area.
At the construction site of Polyclinic #2 on Tatyana Snezhina Street in the Oktyabrsky District, concrete work on the basement floor was also 100% completed. 60% of the volume of concrete has been cast on the 1st floor of the four-story building, and work is underway at the 2nd-floor level. The 12,322 m2 polyclinic is designed for 939 visits per shift and will cater to over 50,000 people.
The PPP agreement provides for the creation of seven polyclinics in Novosibirsk with a total capacity of 6,500 visits per shift. Currently, three facilities are under construction, and their sum visit-per-shift capacity is about 40% of the total. VIS Group implements PPP projects throughout their entire life cycle: from design and fundraising to construction and subsequent technical operation of the facilities. Specialized medical operation will be carried out by state healthcare institutions within the compulsory medical insurance framework.
Three PPP polyclinics under construction will cater to 130,000 Novosibirsk residents
Over 150 people are engaged in the construction of three clinics in Novosibirsk. Primary health care facilities are being created as part of a public-private partnership project. The VIS Group acts as the investor and the private partner. Construction of the building frames is proceeding according to schedule and is slated to be completed this summer.The largest amount of work has been accomplished at Polyclinic #7 on Proletarskaya Street. Concreting work in the basement and first floors of the five-story building is 100% completed. About half of the volume of concrete has been poured on the second and third floors, and the construction of the fourth-floor frame has started. Reinforcement, formwork and floor slab concreting at the 2nd and 3rd-floor levels, as well as 2nd, 3rd and 4th-floor columns are underway. The polyclinic is designed for 920 visits per shift, with about 50,000 people in its service area.
Concreting work in the basement and the first floor of the Polyclinic #27 building on Yerevanskaya Street has been 100% completed, and on the 2nd floor - 75% completed. Basement and first-floor reinforcing cages are 62% completed. The seven-story building is designed to receive 658 patients per shift, with approximately 30,000 people in its service area.
At the construction site of Polyclinic #2 on Tatyana Snezhina Street in the Oktyabrsky District, concrete work on the basement floor was also 100% completed. 60% of the volume of concrete has been cast on the 1st floor of the four-story building, and work is underway at the 2nd-floor level. The 12,322 m2 polyclinic is designed for 939 visits per shift and will cater to over 50,000 people.
The PPP agreement provides for the creation of seven polyclinics in Novosibirsk with a total capacity of 6,500 visits per shift. Currently, three facilities are under construction, and their sum visit-per-shift capacity is about 40% of the total. VIS Group implements PPP projects throughout their entire life cycle: from design and fundraising to construction and subsequent technical operation of the facilities. Specialized medical operation will be carried out by state healthcare institutions within the compulsory medical insurance framework.