Better Rural Healthcare Starts with Understanding the Community
By Bill Ledger, AIA, ACHA, NCARB, EDAC, LEED AP, LSSGB
June 30, 2026Post Tagged in
When people think about designing a new healthcare facility, they often picture floor plans, renderings, and construction schedules.Those are all important, but the most successful healthcare projects begin long before design. They begin by understanding the people who will use the building. That was certainly true for Rush Memorial Hospital’s Milroy Clinic. While every community is different, the lessons from this project apply to nearly any rural healthcare organization planning a renovation, replacement facility, or new clinic. The building wasn’t the starting point. The community was. |
|
![]() |
Design Should Solve Problems Before They’re BuiltHealthcare projects are full of decisions. How large should the building be? How many exam rooms do we need? What should the patient experience look like? Those are important questions, but they shouldn’t come first. Before any design began for the clinic, Rush Memorial Hospital had already invested time learning about the community they were serving. They understood the local market, recognized the opportunity created by a retiring physician, and saw the importance of maintaining healthcare access for residents who preferred receiving care close to home. Just as importantly, they spent time listening. Hospital leadership met with community stakeholders, local businesses, emergency responders, and members of the local Amish community to better understand how people lived, worked, and accessed healthcare. That research gave us something far more valuable than a programming spreadsheet. It gave us context. As architects, that’s one of the greatest gifts a client can provide. |



