1965: Darnall Army Community Hospital On 5 April 1963, the Army broke ground at Fort Hood for the new Darnall Army Community Hospital, meant to replace a
World War II era hospital. Constructed in the latest military design, the original building cost $6 million and was furnished with an additional $6 million of equipment. Darnall was dedicated on April 16, 1965. At the time, Darnall was the first of three permanent Army hospitals of the 200 to 300 bed size to open in the U.S. Built to support a one-
division installation of 17,000 troops, the original structure was soon outgrown as Fort Hood expanded to a full-fledged
corps size installation.
1984: expansion To meet the growing medical needs, the Army began a $49.7 million addition and reconstruction project in 1979 that was completed on December 13, 1984. By the completion of the 1984 project, Darnall had doubled in size.
Outpatient clinic space tripled, the number of
operating rooms increased from five to six, the number of
delivery rooms from two to four, and a
same day surgery Center with two smaller operating rooms was added. In addition, the entire interior of the original building was upgraded. By 1984, Darnall supported 39,000 active-duty personnel, 45,000 family members and 88,000 retired personnel and their family members residing in Fort Hood's 175 county support area.
2003: Wartime support In 2004 Darnall supported the deployment of the
Texas National Guard and then its redeployment in December 2005. Since early 2003, more than 2,200 wounded and ill Soldiers evacuated from
Iraq and
Afghanistan have passed through Darnall. This was the highest total nationally for an Army hospital and third highest facility in the country behind
Walter Reed and
Eisenhower medical centers.
2006: Redesignation as Army Medical Center An expansion of the Darnall Army Community Hospital attempted to satisfy modern health care needs through upgrades and renovations. Upon completion, May 1, 2006, the Army redesignated the facility the Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center. Soon however, it became clear that the result was a facility riddled with compromises which created a disjointed experience. The Army determined it required a brand-new facility with expanded services that would meet the Department of Defense's standards for care at the largest U.S. military base in the world.
2016: New facility Development In 2006, the Army announced that the new Fort Hood master plan designated a site near the Clear Creek Post Exchange for a new medical facility to replace the existing structure. As the financial crisis materialized in 2008 and 2009, the project was added to the slate of projects contracted under the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, often known as the stimulus package. Ground was broken for the new facility on December 6, 2010. The new facility opened in 2016.
Design The 947,000-square-foot Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center – one of the largest medical centers in the Department of Defense inventory – is nearly 60 percent larger than the original facility and includes a six-story hospital, three outpatient clinic buildings and three parking garages. It is the last project completed under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, and also the program's largest contribution to the Department of Defense. According to
Major General John Uberti, deputy commanding general,
III Corps and Fort Hood. The replacement hospital – The new hospital's procurement was managed by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and designed and built by a partnership of
Balfour Beatty,
McCarthy,
HKS, and Wingler & Sharp. The Corps of Engineers core demand of the structure in design was durability. As a result, the facility is built on an entirely hardened concrete frame, surrounded by precast concrete panels. The design also called for hard wearing interior fittings, with entirely stainless steel
flashings and
double- and triple-pane windows. The building is also designed to be expanded as the years go by. When the floors were laid, accessible crawlspaces were built between each floor, with sufficient room for mechanics to easily conduct maintenance for
HVAC, plumbing, medical gas system and a pneumatic tube system. The space allows future renovation and reconfiguring to occur floor by floor, with a standardized modular design in clinical spaces and floors which are adaptable to suit acuity levels and incremental growth. instead of needing to shut down hospital operations during construction. For example, ambulatory care areas were designed to flex and adapt into adjacent areas with different functions. It is also designed to accommodate future technology driven by medical equipment advances. Flexibility is an important part of the design. The medical center can grow both vertically and horizontally to keep up with the needs of soldiers and their families. Three stories can be added to the bed tower, and nearly 100,000 square feet of additional space can be added horizontally at the clinic level. The medical center separates its services into what it calls 'portals of care', categorizing patient needs as primarily clinic-based or hospital-based. The hospital maintains a variety of service lines, but focuses especially on
women's healthcare,
orthopedics, and
behavioral health. Major clinic-based portals of care contain primary and comprehensive departments, which include primary care, orthopedics and rehabilitation, women's outpatient services, emergency medicine, disability evaluation, surgery and multiple outpatient behavioral health clinics. The facility opened in 2016, with
Deputy Under Secretary of Defense John Conger, Congressman
John Carter, and Fort Hood leadership in attendance. It is designed to be in service for the next 60 years. == Facilities ==