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Ohio State Re-Routes Thoroughfare to Protect Campus

Tue August 20, 2019 - Midwest Edition #17
Lori Tobias – CEG Correspondent


Overhead view of the $51.9 million phase one of Ohio State University’s Framework 2.0 Master Plan.
Overhead view of the $51.9 million phase one of Ohio State University’s Framework 2.0 Master Plan.
Overhead view of the $51.9 million phase one of Ohio State University’s Framework 2.0 Master Plan. 
 A Caterpillar 336E “hydraulic hybrid” excavator goes to work during the earthmoving component of OSU’s Cannon Drive project.
 OSU’s Framework 2.0 Master Plan comes with an added bonus — additional acreage on which plans for development are already in the works by school administrators.
 In addition to serving as flood protection, the straightening of Cannon Drive creates an eventual north-south connection between King and Lane avenues. A paving crew works to create new sidewalk along the reshaped Cannon Drive.
 Phase one of the project, which began Sept. 5, 2017, is about 85 percent complete, according to project manager Tom Ekegren.
 Work on phase one of Framework 2.0 Master Plan is expected to run through autumn 2019.

A road project currently underway to protect the Ohio State University from flooding will have come with an added bonus once completed — additional acreage on which plans for development are already in the works by school administrators.

The $51.9 million phase one of Ohio State's Framework 2.0 Master Plan straightens Cannon Drive from King Avenue to John Herrick Avenue and elevates the roadway from four to eight feet, creating a 100-year flood barrier. Phase two, expected to kick off in 2020, will further the realignment from Herrick Avenue to Woody Hayes Drive, also elevating it four to eight feet and creating a 500-year flood barrier. In moving the roadway, which runs along the Olentangy River, 12 acres will become available for development. That acreage will be the home of a new medical facility in the area of the Columbus, Ohio, campus known as the Medical District.

"The move of Cannon Drive is really about protecting the university and, primarily, the health sciences district and the medical center from the 100- and 500-year flood events," explained Mark Conselyea, associate vice president of the Office of Facilities Operation and Development (FOD).

Phase one of the project, which began Sept. 5, 2017, is about 85 percent complete, according to project manager Tom Ekegren. Work is expected to run through autumn 2019. Part of the project is a pump house powered by three massive pumps that can drive 27,000 gallons of water per minute away from the campus and back into the river.

"By doing this project, it raises the protection of the campus and removes the hospital from that floodplain," Ekegren said.

Concerns about flooding have been growing in the last 10 to 15 years, with temporary flood measures put in place when conditions pose potential hazards. In July 2017, the campus experienced a serious flash flood that forced evacuations in the area.

"We used to think this can't happen to us and this won't happen to us," admitted Lynn Readey, FOD vice president. "There are over 400 buildings on the Columbus campus alone. What sits on this campus is very, very valuable and needs as much protection as we can possibly provide it."

The new Wexner Center Inpatient Tower is an expansion of the existing hospital and will be constructed on a site currently occupied by two parking garages. The target opening date of the $102.1 million project is slated for May 2021.

Plans call for a new garage to be constructed, then the existing garages demolished before the inpatient facility is constructed there. The hospital will feature modern educational space and provide "cutting-edge research, outstanding clinical training and world-class patient care," according to the OSU website. The tower will be the largest single facilities project ever undertaken at Ohio State.

Other features of the Wexner Medical Center include:

  • Up to 840 beds, replacing and expanding on the 440 beds in Rhodes Hall and Doan Hall; all 840 beds would be in private room settings to elevate patient-centered care, safety and training for the next generation of physicians.
  • 60 neonatal intensive care unit bassinets.
  • State-of-the-art diagnostic, treatment and inpatient service areas (emergency department, imaging, operating rooms, critical care and medical/surgical beds).
  • Leading-edge digital technologies to advance care and teaching.
  • Enhanced connections between the new Inpatient Hospital and The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center — Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute that also connect to Rhodes Hall, Doan Hall, the Ross Heart Hospital and the Brain and Spine Hospital.
  • Additional green space as well as a new parking garage west of McCampbell Hall.
  • A new inpatient tower garage with up to 1,900 spaces to serve patients and visitors by replacing the North and South Cannon garages.

The Framework 2.0 master plan is a continuation of plan implemented in 2010 aimed at envisioning how the campus will develop over the following years.

"2.0 looks at all the different districts on campus," said Dan Hedman, director of marketing and communications. "We have a very urban-built center of campus that hooks to downtown Columbus. The West Campus starts to become more agricultural. There are lots of opportunities for land. We have three projects on the West Campus, including an Ambulatory Center, Interdisciplinary Research and an Energy and Innovation Center. All fall in line with research and technology. The University has a strategic plan and it calls for growth to support teaching, learning and research. All of the projects have different timelines, but a lot of them are in the design phase right now." CEG


Lori Tobias

Lori Tobias is a journalist of more years than she cares to count, most recently as a staff writer for The Oregonian and previously as a columnist and features writer for the Rocky Mountain News. She is the author of the memoir, Storm Beat - A Journalist Reports from the Oregon Coast, and the novel Wander, winner of the Nancy Pearl Literary Award in 2017. She has freelanced for numerous publications, including The New York Times, The Denver Post, Alaska Airlines in-flight, Natural Home, Spotlight Germany, Vegetarian Times and the Miami Herald. She is an avid reader, enjoys kayaking, traveling and exploring the Oregon Coast where she lives with her husband Chan and rescue pups, Gus and Lily.


Read more from Lori Tobias here.





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