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Detailed plans ready for hospital on Omandurar Estate

Updated - October 18, 2016 02:13 pm IST - CHENNAI:

Elaborate plans have been drawn up for converting one block of the Assembly-Secretariat complex on the Omandurar Government Estate into a multi-super specialty hospital.

The Buildings wing of the Public Works Department has floated bids and the total estimated cost of the proposed civil and electrical works is around Rs. 26.9 crore.

The last dates for submission of various tender documents are January 24 and 25.

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Sources say the government is keen on finalising the award of contracts expeditiously so that the works can be taken up immediately.

Outpatient wards

According to the plans, the ground and first floors of the Block ‘A' will serve as outpatient wards for departments such as Oncology, Cardiology and Neurology.

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The second floor will house laboratories and other facilities for diagnosis.

The third and fourth floors will be used as general wards. The fifth and sixth floors of the block will be for special wards.

Two floors of the public plaza located on the south-western side of the estate will be modified to accommodate operation theatres, intensive care units and recovery wards.

Tenders have also been invited for modifying the existing passenger lifts into patient-cum-passenger lifts.

As per the original plan of the previous Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam government, the Secretariat-Assembly complex would have two blocks – seven–storey Block A with 97,829 square metres and eight-storey Block B with 73,399 square metres.

On assumption of office in May last, the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam government decided to shift the Secretariat back to Fort St. George.

Then, a handful of departments of the government were functioning at the complex.

In August, Chief Minister Jayalalithaa announced her government's decision to convert the new Secretariat-Assembly complex into a multi-super specialty hospital-cum-medical college.

While Block A would accommodate the hospital, the incomplete Block B would house the proposed medical college.

Subsequently, officials of the Health and Public Works Departments went to several different parts of the country in order to study the design of leading hospitals in various places, after which the proposals were drawn up.

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