Skyfloater wrote: » https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/9/93/Burj_Khalifa.jpg/1200px-Burj_Khalifa.jpg So, at €2.4billion we could have built not one, but two of these!
Amirani wrote: » I think a National Children's Hospital is a far better use of money than a half empty vanity skyscraper. We also don't have enough slave labour available in order to build 2 Burj Khalifa's for that price. Not such a problem in the UAE. Whatever the merits of the NCH, price comparisons of anything with the Burj Khalifa are the most moronic things going.
RandRuns wrote: » Comparision with hospitals (rather than skyscrapers, hotels, etc.) in the Arabian Peninsula are interesting - the Arabian Peninsula is consistently the most expensive place in the world to build a hospital, just after the USA, due to many factors (little local expertise, corruption, oil wealth driving up prices, difficult construction challenges etc.). Yet, from what I can see, no hospital ever built there comes anywhere close to the cost per bed as the NCH, in fact none have even come in at one third the cost per bed. The best little country in the world to win a healthcare construction project.
Amirani wrote: » Construction in the UAE (and many parts of the Arabian peninsula) is done with lots of slave labour from South Asia. When you don't pay construction workers, don't provide them safety equipment and don't pay compensation when they are injured/die then it lowers construction costs significantly.
ExMachina1000 wrote: » From experience with tenders I can tell you that it's not uncommon for one party to be given the details of the other tenders as they come in. All done as a favour of course with a reward if the contract is awarded. That's common enough. Not saying that's what happened here obviously but it definitely goes on. Cronyism built this country my friend.
RandRuns wrote: » The expertise that grossly underestimated the cost initially, and now issue quarterly increases? The onsite "project team expertise" is expertise on maximising the amount of money this project will cost. The procurement "project team expertise" was such that the initial costs, design, timeline, and contract were grossly inadequete. If you have, as you seem to admit, no knowledge of construction, quantity surveying, or anything else related to this subject, it might be best not to tell those that do, that they are wrong, without at least providing some basis for that opinion.
RandRuns wrote: » I'm not sure who that was directed at, but I can assure you that I am far from a "barstool expert" on this subject.
LuasSimon wrote: » Some Builders are going to become extremely well off people out of the Childrens Hospital, many of these are sizeable donors to Fine Gael coffers.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » I have negligible knowledge of construction, and no knowledge of quantity surveying. I do know a very little bit about Design and Build contracts, and how they are a fairly standard approach with projects of this nature all over the world, with the result that the client is NOT entering a fixed price contract to build their facility at the outset. You did know that yourself, right?
AndrewJRenko wrote: » You do know that not everyone drives or has access to a car, right? We need a hospital with great public transport connectivity, as is standard in UK and around the world. The Luas literally runs beside this building.
Pete_Cavan wrote: » Most of the medical staff will be transferring from the existing children's hospitals so the majority are likely Dublin based already. Most will be switching from Crumlin which is not far away.
blackbox wrote: » Why do we need a children's hospital? Would it not be much more efficient to have children's wards in regular hospitals. Then there would be no issues with co-location and there would be savings in administration.
Pete_Cavan wrote: » James’s is Ireland’s largest adult teaching and research-intensive hospital with 39 clinical specialities and numerous national facilities. Some of these have highly specialised staff and equipment. For a population as small as ours, you can only provide this in one location, having them in two locations means buying twice as much incredibly expensive equipment and having twice as much staff each doing half the work. If the NCH isn't located where this is, you have to bring the patients to it and back which is not efficient. No patients or teams will have to be transferred now, thats the point. Not everything is different between adults and children, the person turning 18 means nothing to a serious disease.
jimmycrackcorm wrote: » How is that working currently when it comes to the existing setup? I would have thought it more advisable to build on a greenfield site for the vast majority of cases and have small specialized satellite units in the likes of James. Even after it's built, won't serious neurological cases still mean using Beaumont? At the end of the day though, while there is a huge spend on this hospital, it's still going to be used in 100 years time.
RandRuns wrote: » If the contract for the new hospital had been awarded on a fixed contract at a comparable cost to similar projects in other Western European countries, rather than arguing whether it should be on the St. James' site or not, we could have built an entire new St. James' AND the new NCH on a greenfield site for the same cost as the new hospital alone will cost.
Pete_Cavan wrote: » No chance you could build building a children's hospital and also a new largest adult hospital in the country for less than just building a new childrens hospital and integrating with the existing largest adult hospital. You obviously need to buy everything new as you can't just transport and set up specialist medical equipment, as well as patients, overnight and continuing to provide care the next morning. You have to duplicate everything for a period and what do you do with it all after?
Deleted User wrote: » Could have easily moved it out past the Red Cow which would have suited the Crumlin staff too much better. I guess it had to be convenient for the D4 types.
Deleted User wrote: » Sure grand, we'll get the Luas up from Cork. No problem.
Deleted User wrote: » Though this may sound silly, if the hospital has to be so close to St James, could they not have just built onto St James? Or reinforce the foundations and add a couple of storeys to it? (unsure how plausible this is).
Deleted User wrote: » I still think, an easier-to-access green site off the M50 with space and a plan to build there again in future would have made more sense. In 20 years St James will be outdated and the increasing population will need another hospital to replace/add to that one. This could be then built beside the NCH if it was on a green site with some long term thinking.
RandRuns wrote: » The standard benchmark cost for a new hospital build in the Western world at present is between €750,000 and €1.5m per bed.
RandRuns wrote: » The standard benchmark cost for a new hospital build in the Western world at present is between €750,000 and €1.5m per bed. Taking the higher figure gives us a cost of €1.5 billion to build a new St. James and €705 million for the NCH. Together, less than what the NCH alone is projected to cost.
RandRuns wrote: » I don't know you, so I'm not aware of your expertise or otherwise, but I'd be willing to bet I've a lot more experience with large construction projects, esp. medical projects, than you have. And that goes from design, through tendering and procurement, to construction and completion. Snide remarks aside, I am very familiar with design & build contracts. I'm also familiar with how, in this case, it was neither a D&B, nor a fixed price from the off, which is why we find ourselves where we are. I've worked on many large hospital projects, and have worked on some of the largest contracts ever completed in Ireland. None of them went the way this one has. It was set up to fail from the beginning.
jelem wrote: » being built where it is just so the government can continue to allow private health gain profit and no intention of employing FULL staff as it intends sharing staff between the hospitals. this another cheap gimmick (professionals nearby) whilst politicians have gained 2 pay rises in last year or was it more. it should have been built sort of midlands between the N7 and N6 and as near same distance from all points in ireland for access. it would be dublin city\county issue to deal with clear acces to hospital for dublin residents not cork\donegal patients\residents whom have to travel to dublin. again corruption by FG and FF
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Is there any particular reason that you reckon that your view on this matter should be given equal or more consideration than the eminent industry experts? What 'corruption' are you talking about here? Who was corrupt and what did they gain from it?
Fianna Fail’s Health spokesman, Stephen Donnelly, said the most expensive hospital in the world was the Royal Adelaide Hospital in Australia.And the most expensive hospital building project was the new Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm, Sweden - the current cost stands at almost €2.1bn. “But they are getting three times more hospital beds,” said Mr Donnelly.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Is there any particular reason that you reckon that your view on this matter should be given equal or more consideration than the eminent industry experts?