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Hospitals to build $14M medical center in Bargersville

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Community Health Network and Johnson Memorial Hospital plan to spend $14 million to build a medical office building and outpatient center in Bargersville, the  hospital systems announced Wednesday.

The 70,000-square-foot facility is scheduled to be completed in mid-2013. It will include offices for primary care and specialist physicians, rehabilitation, imaging and lab testing, as well as a community meeting room.

The facility, called Stones Crossing Health Pavilion, will be located on six acres at 3000 State Road 135, about 10 miles southwest of Greenwood. The developer is Greenwood-based Alderson Commercial Group Inc.

The project is the first since Indianapolis-based Community and Franklin-based Johnson Memorial announced a clinical partnership in early 2011.

“From the time that we announced our collaboration with Community Health Network, our focus has been on creating new access points for residents of Johnson County,” Johnson Memorial CEO Larry Heydon said in a prepared statement. “This will be a dramatic step in that direction, and certainly won’t be the last.”

Community has been jockeying with Franciscan St. Francis Health for dominance of the southern suburbs of Indianapolis. Franciscan planned to build an emergency room and medical office building in Greenwood by September, but is now reconsidering those plans.

 

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  1. Good ole' Obamacare. Thanks liberals and those who didn't bother to vote.

  2. Yes. Blame those who were too lazy to go vote Obama out and those who voted him in again. That's my take on it. I know folks won't get it on the left. OK. Start berating me now!

  3. Serioulsy, people are AGINST this project? Most communities would be salivating over a project like this. You'd rather have an empty eye-sore gas station and shacks posing as apartments? This project is exactly what BR needs. BUILD IT MR MAYOR. And yes, I am a BR resident, and have been for 20 years.

  4. As a St. Vincent employee of over 20 years, I am saddened and disheartened by this announcement. Unfortunately, as the healthcare "industry" continues on this political and corporate path, all that St. Vincent Hospital has stood for spiritually for its employees and this community is being sucked dry. I know it truly has no choice. It is not just Obamacare or just competition or just any single thing. This trend started long before I was even born when the government became involved in healthcare and it became an "industry." I grieve for those who will lose their jobs, one of whom may be me, but I also grieve for this hospital which I have served for over 20 years. May God give us and it the grace to withstand the future of healthcare.

  5. Why do people constantly harp on this issue and act ignorant about what a city population measures? A city's population is the city's population. There is no argument or debate about it. If you want to measure the density of a city--measure it. If you want to measure the size of a metropolitan area, then measure the metropolitan population. City boundaries cover different sized areas--and they always have (though the disparity has probably increased since about 1900 or so when more cities began annexing their surrounding communities). For example, San Francisco only covers 49 square miles while Houston cover nearly 600 square miles. No one argues about the population rankings of either city even though they clearly cover extremely different sized areas. Indianapolis is the 13 largest city by population in the U.S. That is a fact. While the population of a metropolitan area may give you a better sense of how large a community is, as noted, even metro areas can vary widely in the size of geographic area they cover--so that is not a perfect comparison either.

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