Expansion Leads to More Patient Rooms, Additional Parking for Sutter Roseville Campus
May 10, 2024
Gary Zavoral
Sutter Roseville Emergency Department

ROSEVILLE, Calif. — In order to meet the growing need for tertiary healthcare services in south Placer County, Sutter Roseville Medical Center is converting non-patient space into 24 additional medical-surgical patient rooms and also building out shell space designed to expand the intensive care unit, adding 12 more beds for critical-care patients.

The ICU expansion will allow a current 12-bed ICU wing to be converted into a specialized cardiovascular ICU. In total, once the build-out is completed, Sutter Roseville will have 68 adult ICU beds.

Sutter Roseville currently has 382 licensed beds and, when the two expansions are completed in 2025, there will be 418 licensed beds.

To accommodate non-patient care services impacted by construction, Sutter Health leased a suite in the Adventist Health corporate office building at One Adventist Way in Roseville. This new office suite serves as an extension of the Sutter Roseville Medical Center campus and also has the added benefit of freeing up parking near the hospital for patients and visitors.

The office space at the Adventist Health location is Suite 150 and has 14,880 square feet. The first phase of this Sutter Roseville campus expansion moved 30 employees and also relocated new-employee orientation and other educational opportunities for staff. In total, the space has 65 cubicles and 10 offices.

Sutter also leased 350 parking spots for those employees and staff who take advantage of a regular shuttle service to the Sutter Roseville campus, making more parking available for patients and visitors.

“The new location helps us maintain our commitment to providing the best working environment for our employees, offering a spacious and collaborative space designed to foster creativity and productivity,” said Sutter Roseville CEO Tammy Powers. “We also have added staff parking and expanded shuttle services at this location to free up parking for patients and visitors to our campus.”

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