2. A Historical Journey
The Texas Medical Center in the Making
Giants In Vision
■ Houston Businessman Monroe
Dunaway Anderson creates a
business legacy based on cotton
trading thanks to Houston’s
newfound leadership as a
trading/shipping center (Anderson
Clayton Company)
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3. A Historical Journey
The Texas Medical Center in the Making
Giants In Vision
M.D. Anderson creates the M.D. Anderson Foundation for the betterment of
mankind in 1936. Upon his death, the foundation was funded to approximately
$19 million (valued at $293 million in 2010).
M.D. Anderson Foundation
■ Monroe D. Anderson
■ Colonel William Bates (Fulbright & Jaworski)
■ John H. Freeman (General Counsel of Anderson Clayton - Fulbright & Jaworski)
■ Horace Wilkins (Banker)
Texas Medical Center Chartered in 1945
■ Ernst William Bertner, M.D. - First Texas Medical Center President
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4. Land grants/leases and
philanthropy
Campus master planning
Infrastructure development
and maintenance
Architectural standards on
covenant restricted property
External coordination and
planning with public entities
Provision of ancillary services
Fostering Development of the Texas
Medical Center
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5. A Historical Journey
The Texas Medical Center in the Making
Houston in the 1940’s
■ 1940’s Houston had shortage of
board certified MD’s, acute
shortage of hospital beds and no
medical schools for a population of
450,000
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6. A Historical Journey
The Texas Medical Center in the Making
Dallas’s Loss = Houston’s Gain
■ 1943: Baylor College of Medicine
relocates from Dallas to Houston.
M.D. Anderson Foundation provides a
$1 million contribution to the school
plus $1 million for faculty and
research (to be paid over a ten year
period). Houston Chamber of
Commerce provides $500 thousand.
■ Baylor College of Medicine finds its
first home in a Sears warehouse at
the intersection of Allen Parkway and
South Shepherd drive.
Baylor College of Medicine under construction, 1946
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7. A Historical Journey
The Texas Medical Center in the Making
Visions Become Reality
■ By 1954, the Texas Medical Center
had eleven institutions: four
hospitals; two children's hospitals; a
university; a library; a speech and
hearing center; a dental school; and
an overall planning and coordinating
group.
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8. The largest concentration of medical assets in the world
Hosted 7.1 million patient visits in 2010
52 Member institutions, all “not for profit”
92,500 Employees (the largest employer in Houston when
viewed as a single entity)
34,000 Students, including 5,000+ international students
6,900 Hospital beds
16,000+ International patient visits annually
45.5 million Gross Square Feet (GSF) for all campuses
280 Buildings
1,300+ Acres
updated to include 2010-2011 figures
A Vision Turned into Reality…the Texas Medical Center Today
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9. 21 Academic Institutions
16 Hospitals
3 Medical Schools
3 Public Health Organizations
1 Dental School
5 Nursing Schools
2 Schools of Pharmacy
1 Children’s Mental Health Organization
26 Agencies of government
Of the 52 Member Institutions
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10.
11. According to an economic impact study conducted by the
Southwest Business Research Institute, Texas Medical
Center:
Generates $1.44 in government revenues for each
$1 in pro rated government costs
92,500 direct employment, 121,500 indirect jobs
Direct Expenditures: by Texas Medical Center
institutions greater than $5.7 billion
Secondary Expenditures: more than $8.1 billion (all
institutional expenditures, not personal income
related)
Economic Impact
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12. Serving the Needs of the World’s Largest Medical Center
Parking and Mobility Security Services Landscaping
Street Maintenance Emergency Preparedness
Growth Coordination
Wayfinding Leasing Food Operations
13. “I have often said that this is a great medical center and we are
all proud of that. It was built on competition, but it will be
sustained and enhanced and it will endure because of its
collaboration.”
James T. Willerson, M.D.
President, Texas Heart Institute
Collaboration
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14. Advisory Councils
Provide administration and coordination for the collaborative activities of
the various inter-institutional councils. Examples include:
Policy Council
Government Affairs Advisory Council
Quality and Patient Safety Council
Council of Nurse Executives
International Affairs Advisory Council
Planning and Construction Advisory Council
Council of Chief Financial Officers
Public Relations Advisory Council
Council of Research Directors
Security Advisory Council
Student Affairs Advisory Council
Council of Volunteer Directors
Council of Chief Human Resource Officers
Council of Pharmacy Executives
Chief Information/Chief Medical Information Officers 14
15. More than 50 cities in the United States and 100
countries, foreign governments and medical organizations
have visited the Texas Medical Center
National and International Collaborations
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16. Texas Medical Center News
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Only campus wide
newspaper serving Texas
Medical Center since 1979
Published twice a month,
distribution is 40,000 +
Health-related news articles,
in-depth features and
editorials
Read by physicians,
researchers, employees,
patients, visitors, students;
academic, civic, and
business leaders
8,000 pages read on-line
monthly
Texas Medical Center News
17. Core Campuses
Main Campus
Historic core of Texas
Medical Center
Main Street Corridor
An important bridge between
Texas Medical Center and Rice
University
Mid Campus
Brings together emerging large
land development areas
South Campus
The University of Texas campus
dedicated to patient care,
research, education and
administration/parking
W. Leland Anderson Campus
High school for health
professions, psychiatric center,
child-care center and school for
developmentally delayed
children
Rice University Campus
Unprecedented opportunity to
expand teaching and research
initiatives 17
18. Master planning an important aspect of growth since 1947
Ten stakeholders/landowners currently collaborating in joint effort
Mid Campus will be the “Heart” of the Texas Medical Center Campuses
Capitalize on success of Main Campus and avoid some of the challenges
Creation of Mid and South Campus Conceptual
Development Plan
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19. Main Campus Area’s Dramatic Growth
Number of
New,
Expanded
and Under
Construction
Buildings and
Garages as
Shown
1994-1999
2000-2009
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20. Other Member Institution Locations
West Campus
University of Houston
The University of Texas Medical
Branch at Galveston
Shriners Hospital for Children -
Galveston
Lyndon B. Johnson General Hospital
Quentin Mease Community Hospital
DePelchin Children’s Center
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21. What started out as a dream is now a stunning
reality. Houston has a “city of medicine”
unmatched in the world.
Texas Medical Center is now a major business
district where planning for growth,
infrastructure, accessibility and hazard
mitigation are increasingly important.
Healthcare is a significant employer and
economic engine for the community.
Summary thoughts on Texas Medical
Center and its Growth
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22. Questions??
“The Center is a place where people help people; where
doctors and nurses try to make people well; where people
begin life and where life ends; where the skills of
medicine, dentistry, nursing and all kindred services are
handed down from teacher to student; and where
inquiring minds look into the nature of disease and try to
find ways to alleviate, to cure, or learn to prevent the
affliction.”
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