Mayo Clinic plans to spend $190 million as part of a project to add 11 stories to the Gonda Building, a prominent building in Rochester that would become the city's tallest as a result.
The clinic would add four floors for patient care in the building, plus a seven-story hotel developed through a joint venture between Mayo and a company based in Singapore.
When the project is complete in 2022, the Gonda Building would stand 32 stories tall — growing from its current 305 feet to 490 feet, Mayo says.
"We are in dire need of additional clinical space," said Dr. C. Michel Harper Jr., executive dean of practice at Mayo Clinic. "This allows us to announce a strategic collaboration … so that we can have four additional floors on top of our existing Gonda Building and integrate that with seven floors of hospitality hotel space — a premier hotel space."
The Gonda Building serves as the Mayo Clinic's front door in Rochester. It features a large atrium where patients often start their visit to the Mayo Clinic, plus outpatient clinics, surgery centers and some space that is technically regarded as hospital space (even though the building is not a hospital).
The $190 million expense would add four floors of clinical space that would span about 200,000 square feet and would be used for cancer patients and outpatient procedures.
That's an expansion of more than 10 percent compared with the 1.5 million square feet overall in the Gonda Building, which was the biggest construction project in Mayo Clinic's history when it was completed in 2001.
Preliminary plans call for construction on the Gonda expansion to begin by the end of 2019 or early 2020, with completion by the end of 2022.