Schneider Electric is set to deploy its smart building and power management solutions in the new state-of-the-art Midland Metropolitan University Hospital.
The new hospital, run by Sandwell and West Birmingham NHS Trust, will provide services to more than half a million patients. Behind the scenes, Schneider Electric’s EcoStruxure solutions will be deployed. The project will provide industry-leading smart healthcare services in the new hospital facility, creating high levels of resilience and efficiency through engineering infrastructure excellence.
Following consultations with key stakeholders, the construction of the hospital has been designed to reduce risk, simplify design, scale at speed, and meet varying needs. Schneider’s industry-leading solutions for healthcare providers were chosen for the project as it enables complete visibility of the status, performance, and condition of the critical infrastructure. Schneider Electric’s solutions will be fundamental to the building’s power and control systems, enabling the site to take advantage of Internet of Things (IoT) technology. This will help reduce but without compromising, the maintenance needed to improve patient safety, operational efficiency and reliability while reducing energy consumption and costs.
“Schneider Electric is delighted to be involved with the Midland Metropolitan University Hospital project,” said Chris Needham, solutions architect at Schneider Electric. “The first half of the year has shown the vital and often overlooked importance of resilience and sustainability of the healthcare sector. Consequently, implementing cutting edge technologies and intelligent infrastructures that provide busy clinical, operational, and facility management (FM) staff with the ability to access data and information that provides new and valuable insights in real-time is even more essential. By ensuring hospitals are intelligent, flexible, and future-proofed from the outset, we can be confident that they will remain reliable, efficient, and safe for patients, visitors and staff.”