U.S. Naval Hospital Guam

A Vision to Lead Navy Medicine in Quality, Patient-Centered Care Requires a New State-of-the-Art Hospital

Key Statistics

Location:

Tutuhan, Guam

Client:

NAVFAC Marianas / NAVFAC Hawaii

Scale:

296,000 square feet

3 levels above grade

42 beds

4 structures

LEED Certification:

Silver

Specialties:

Delivery Model:

CMAR

Architect:

Sherlock Smith & Adams

U.S. Naval Hospital Guam located in Tutuhan, Guam is a ground-up, Type I pebble surface architectural concrete hospital project. The project totals 296,000 square feet throughout four structures with three levels above grade. It includes 42 beds.

Surface parking totals over one acre and 912 stalls. As part of the Watts Webcor Obayashi JV, the phased project also includes an expansion of the Central Utility Plant and multiple support buildings.

Coinciding with the relocation of 8,000 Marines and their family members from Okinawa, Japan, the full-service hospital provides a variety of short-term acute care services including emergency medicine, ICU, inpatient procedures, pediatrics, optometry, physical therapy, mental health services, laboratory, and pharmacy, among others. The existing hospital remained operational during construction and was demolished once the new hospital opened. Webcor self-performed concrete. This project is LEED Silver®.

RELATED PROJECTS

Construction is what we do best - it’s no surprise that we live and breathe every aspect of construction.

View all projects

UCSF Parnassus Heights Health Sciences Instruction and Research Seismic Program

This complex was constructed in 1966 and provides approximately 440,000 gross-square-foot of laboratory spaces, lecture halls and other support spaces to the University.

...

UCSF New Hospital at Parnassus Heights

he New Hospital at UCSF Helen Diller Medical Center at Parnassus Heights (NHPH) is being delivered by a unique, tri-venture partnership among Herrero Builders, Inc., The Boldt Company, and Webcor, known as the HBW group.

...

SJSU Audiology Renovation

This project enabled San Jose State to graduate their first class of audiology doctorate students.

...