15.09.2022
7 modern polyclinic complexes with a total capacity of 6,500 visits per shift are being built thanks to a public-private partnership project. The Seventh Concession Company (part of VIS Group) is the investor and private partner, and the financial partner is Gazprombank. The project itself has undergone major changes since the signing of the agreement in 2019. At the initiative of the regional Ministry of Health and in connection with the new federal regulations that have come into force, the total area of the seven facilities has been increased from 72,000 to 88,000 square meters, complex medical equipment has been added, and the volume of engineering equipment has increased. Today, VIS Group is working on all seven facilities, and for three of them, monolithic building frames will be completed this fall. Construction did not stop even in the most difficult and turbulent times for the economy.
The first of the polyclinics that the head of the region visited today is polyclinic No.2 in a large residential cluster on Tatyana Snezhina Street. It is designed for 939 visits per shift and will serve about 64,000 Novosibirsk residents. The new medical center will have both adult and children's departments. At the request of the polyclinic’s chief physician, a trauma center with a convenient entrance and ambulance accessibility was allocated to a separate area.
Today, the polyclinic building is over 35% ready; in early October, the monolithic frame will be fully completed, which will allow to proceed with the installation of internal communications and interior decoration. Todays, windows are already being installed on the ground floors, internal partitions are being mounted, and electrical networks are being laid out. More than 80 people are engaged at the facility, and their number will increase as needed.
Andrey Travnikov examined the building’s outer contour and walked through two floors. Vladislav Vavilin, Deputy CEO of VIS Group’s Construction Division, told him about the progress of work and the process of purchasing equipment: “All engineering equipment has already been contracted, and is being delivered. The medical complex will be equipped with 520 units of special equipment, most of which are made by the world's leading medical equipment manufacturers. These include CT and MRI imaging, mammography, X-ray and fluorography complexes, as well as ultrasound examination devices. Despite the difficulties that have arisen, all foreign suppliers have confirmed the terms and conditions of delivery. Work at the facility is proceeding according to schedule, construction is scheduled to be completed in the second quarter of next year.”
The construction site of polyclinic No.22 for 907 visits per shift in the Akatui residential area was the second facility under the PPP agreement that the delegation visited today. About 60,000 people will receive qualified assistance in this modern five-story building, also equipped with everything needed for high-tech medical examinations. Today, work is underway here to lay the foundation pile foundation and level the site; a temporary access road has already been built. The delay in the start of construction was caused by the need to repeatedly conduct a state examination of the project to determine the current estimated cost. A significant increase in the prices of building materials and equipment, especially medical equipment, has required certain adjustments, but today nothing prevents the deployment of large-scale work.
The Governor paid special attention to the issues related to the transport accessibility of new polyclinic complexes and the improvement of adjacent territories. Speaking about the public-private partnership mechanism chosen for the implementation of this large-scale social project, Andrey Travnikov noted: “Despite the complexity of this mechanism, its flexibility allows to start implementing the project today, and to attract additional funding along the way. This is beneficial both in terms of the project timing, and in terms of managing the load on the regional budget.”
Under the terms of the PPP agreement, VIS Group is responsible for the design, organization of financing, construction and technical operation of polyclinics until 2029; their specialized medical operation will be carried out by state healthcare institutions, which currently operate in adapted premises, and are unable to provide modern, high-quality assistance.
VIS Group’s PPP project will radically change the healthcare system in Novosibirsk
“This is grandiose-scale construction. Over the next 5 years, we need to create such primary care medical facilities, which in the best times of the Soviet history of our region were built over the span of two five-year plans,” the Governor of the Novosibirsk Region Andrey Travnikov stated following a tour of the polyclinic construction sites in the Kirovsky and Oktyabrsky city districts.7 modern polyclinic complexes with a total capacity of 6,500 visits per shift are being built thanks to a public-private partnership project. The Seventh Concession Company (part of VIS Group) is the investor and private partner, and the financial partner is Gazprombank. The project itself has undergone major changes since the signing of the agreement in 2019. At the initiative of the regional Ministry of Health and in connection with the new federal regulations that have come into force, the total area of the seven facilities has been increased from 72,000 to 88,000 square meters, complex medical equipment has been added, and the volume of engineering equipment has increased. Today, VIS Group is working on all seven facilities, and for three of them, monolithic building frames will be completed this fall. Construction did not stop even in the most difficult and turbulent times for the economy.
The first of the polyclinics that the head of the region visited today is polyclinic No.2 in a large residential cluster on Tatyana Snezhina Street. It is designed for 939 visits per shift and will serve about 64,000 Novosibirsk residents. The new medical center will have both adult and children's departments. At the request of the polyclinic’s chief physician, a trauma center with a convenient entrance and ambulance accessibility was allocated to a separate area.
Today, the polyclinic building is over 35% ready; in early October, the monolithic frame will be fully completed, which will allow to proceed with the installation of internal communications and interior decoration. Todays, windows are already being installed on the ground floors, internal partitions are being mounted, and electrical networks are being laid out. More than 80 people are engaged at the facility, and their number will increase as needed.
Andrey Travnikov examined the building’s outer contour and walked through two floors. Vladislav Vavilin, Deputy CEO of VIS Group’s Construction Division, told him about the progress of work and the process of purchasing equipment: “All engineering equipment has already been contracted, and is being delivered. The medical complex will be equipped with 520 units of special equipment, most of which are made by the world's leading medical equipment manufacturers. These include CT and MRI imaging, mammography, X-ray and fluorography complexes, as well as ultrasound examination devices. Despite the difficulties that have arisen, all foreign suppliers have confirmed the terms and conditions of delivery. Work at the facility is proceeding according to schedule, construction is scheduled to be completed in the second quarter of next year.”
The construction site of polyclinic No.22 for 907 visits per shift in the Akatui residential area was the second facility under the PPP agreement that the delegation visited today. About 60,000 people will receive qualified assistance in this modern five-story building, also equipped with everything needed for high-tech medical examinations. Today, work is underway here to lay the foundation pile foundation and level the site; a temporary access road has already been built. The delay in the start of construction was caused by the need to repeatedly conduct a state examination of the project to determine the current estimated cost. A significant increase in the prices of building materials and equipment, especially medical equipment, has required certain adjustments, but today nothing prevents the deployment of large-scale work.
The Governor paid special attention to the issues related to the transport accessibility of new polyclinic complexes and the improvement of adjacent territories. Speaking about the public-private partnership mechanism chosen for the implementation of this large-scale social project, Andrey Travnikov noted: “Despite the complexity of this mechanism, its flexibility allows to start implementing the project today, and to attract additional funding along the way. This is beneficial both in terms of the project timing, and in terms of managing the load on the regional budget.”
Under the terms of the PPP agreement, VIS Group is responsible for the design, organization of financing, construction and technical operation of polyclinics until 2029; their specialized medical operation will be carried out by state healthcare institutions, which currently operate in adapted premises, and are unable to provide modern, high-quality assistance.