- Client: Owner
- Location: Cleveland, Ohio
- Approximate Project Value: $506 million
Project
Opened in 2008, the Miller Pavilion at Cleveland Clinic is the country’s largest single-use facility for heart and vascular care.
The $506-million Miller Pavilion allowed Cleveland Clinic to physically consolidate and expand its top-rated heart and vascular services. The pavilion has 278 patient rooms – including 110 intensive-care beds – along with dozens of operating suites and a sophisticated 24/7 transportation system complete with helicopters and jets.
The design of the pavilion supports the Clinic’s signature model of health care, clustering facilities and services about individual organ groups in order to minimize disruptions and inefficiencies of doctor and patient movement – as well as the costs of service overlap or redundancy.
SERVICES
The Miller Pavilion was the first project on which Buric applied what would evolve into its proprietary Buric Global offering.
Buric established the project’s master baseline Critical Path Method (CPM) schedule, which was resource-loaded for manpower and major quantities. Buric also conducted a performance trending analysis for each of the respective major trades’ manpower and schedule executions.
Applying schedule analytics throughout, Buric maintained project accountability and apportioned responsibilities – providing the tools to resolve issues contemporaneously and allow Cleveland Clinic to finish the project on time, on budget and without major safety issues or litigation.