Creating an environment that enables excellent patient care calls for a ceiling system that supports acoustic, safety, maintenance and sustainability goals. This was one key aim for Premier Gastroenterology Associates (PGA).

PGA is a patient-focused and physician-owned practice where health and safety are top priorities. In 2020, when the Little Rock, Arkansas gastroenterology practice undertook the challenge of transforming a long-vacant retail space into the new Premier Medical Plaza, they collaborated with WER Architects and Rockfon to fulfill these priorities.

Helping bring PGA’s ambitious vision to reality, WER Architects worked closely with its client to create a welcoming, comfortable experience for the well-being of both patients and staff. Along with a generous use of natural light and a palette of calming colors, WER carefully selected materials to support safety, health, cleanliness and acoustic privacy. 

All of Rockfon’s ceiling systems were supplied through J.E. Allen Co. and installed by Clark Contractors. The completed Premier Medical Plaza offers medical, clinical and surgery facilities for several medical groups in 100,000 square feet of space. 

NA, PGA, Premier Medical Plaza, Artic, Chicago Metallic 1200, Renovation, resized for web

Rockfon Ceilings Promote Patient-Centered, Personalized Care

PGA’s mission is to provide the highest-quality digestive disease care. The practice is dedicated to delivering this care in a warm, personal and genuine manner.

“We wanted to create a whole new culture in healthcare. A culture where our patients and our employees feel like they’re our family and feel like they’re coming home when they come to Premier Gastroenterology,” said Premier CEO, William E. Greene III, ACHE.

At Premier, Greene explained, the patient is not just a name on a chart. Medical expertise should go hand in hand with compassionate care. A trip to the doctor’s office can be an unnerving experience for many people. Premier Gastroenterology doctors are known for their kindness, empathy and attentiveness — attributes that go a long way toward putting their patients at ease and making the experience at Premier a great one.

Infection Control With Rockfon’s Medical and Hygienic Ceiling Panels

“First do no harm” is an often-quoted mantra in medicine. It also rings true for the design and construction teams responsible for building the essential medical and healthcare facilities in our communities. Safety and health are the top priorities in evaluating materials and finishes for these spaces. This includes not only their composition but also their cleanliness.

“There were a lot of unique challenges to this project, it being such an old building,” said WER associate and project architect, James Swann, AIA. “Prior to the new medical design, it was a big-box store. Taking something that was obviously meant to be a retail store and turning it into something that’s medical, that’s clean and efficient and that has all of these requirements is very complicated.” 

WER director of interiors, Lauren Dickey, NCIDQ, ASID, agreed and added, “In today’s medical facilities, infection control is incredibly important — cleanability is huge.”

Where infection control is the priority, Rockfon’s specially treated medical and hygienic ceiling panel surface finishes allow cleaning with water and some diluted disinfectants. In some cases, specially treated surface finishes on stone wool ceiling panels allow for more intensive cleaning, following a defined protocol.

Meeting Premier Medical Plaza’s most critical cleaning requirements, Rockfon Medical™ Standard ceiling panels are classified into Bacteriological Classes B5 and B10. They have low particle emission, resulting in Clean Room Classification ISO Class 5.

Along with being easy to clean, Rockfon’s metal and stone wool ceiling systems do not absorb water, moisture or humidity, and they do not contain organic materials. The inherent qualities of these ceiling panels also resist mold, mildew and other potentially harmful microorganisms.

“Knowing that these panels do not mold or mildew, knowing that you can wipe them down easily, that they’re not going to sag and that they’re not going to fall out of the ceiling really gave us confidence in moving forward with the products that we selected,” Dickey said.

The stone wool panels installed throughout PGA’s facility have also earned UL Environmental GREENGUARD® Gold certification for low chemical emissions into indoor air during product usage. The certification process ensures that a product is suitable for environments such as healthcare facilities and takes into consideration safety factors that may affect those with vulnerable immune systems, children and seniors.

Rockfon Acoustic Ceilings Support Patient Privacy at Premier Gastroenterology

Just as the air we breathe surrounds and affects us, so do the sounds we hear. “Sound control is a critical issue, particularly in a high-volume clinic like ours,” Greene said.

Loud and overlapping sounds, even at a conversational level, can quickly become unwanted noise. Noise can cause distraction, confusion and agitation. It can mean that a healthcare professional loses focus and inaccurately records critical information. It can mean that a nurse becomes desensitized to auditory monitoring cues and is slow to react to a patient in need. It can mean that a patient with compromised hearing does not understand a doctor’s instructions. It can mean that a private conversation between a family and a medical professional is overheard, violating HIPAA.

“Sound control is a critical issue, particularly in a high-volume clinic like ours,” William E. Greene III said.

To help protect privacy, increase comprehension and improve concentration for PGA’s team, WER designed Premier Medical Plaza with acoustic comfort in mind. Rockfon’s simple approach to acoustics is based on proven acoustical engineering practices:

  1. Select a ceiling system to optimize acoustic absorption.
  2. Where needed, use full-height walls or plenum barriers and floor slabs to effectively optimize sound insulation or blocking between rooms.
  3. Ensure that the background sound level is within the desired range.

This approach achieves the best sound experience at the best price. It also complies with the more stringent acoustic requirements of current building standards and guidelines. For example, the guidelines for the design and construction of healthcare facilities, published by the Facility Guidelines Institute, require that “all normally occupied healthcare facility spaces shall incorporate acoustic surfaces.”

To meet their higher-performance criteria, many building standards, guidelines and evidence-based design principles now require the use of a high noise reduction coefficient (NRC) ceiling panel. An NRC of 0.90 or more is considered the best category of sound absorption and is recommended for patient care areas. For Premier Medical Plaza’s patient care rooms, Rockfon Medical Standard stone wool ceiling products provide an NRC of 0.90.

Rockfon’s metal ceiling panels can also provide an NRC as high as 0.90. Rockfon Planar Macroplus linear metal ceilings were perforated and installed at Premier Medical Plaza with an Acoutex™ backer for improved acoustics above the nurses’ stations and the staff’s centralized workstations to support their focused productivity. In the main waiting areas, the acoustic backer was not used, as these communal spaces do not require the same level of privacy and concentration. 

As part of an Optimized Acoustics approach to the ceiling design, Dickey added that “being able to take products that look good and also have a great acoustical value really helps bring both of those together in a very successful design.”

Maximizing Natural Light With White Reflective Ceiling Panels

Bright, daylit interiors also contribute to Premier’s comfortable, inviting space for both patients and staff. Skylights are positioned above the centralized workstations and nurses’ stations and in the corridors. Helping maximize the natural light, Rockfon Artic and Medical Standard ceiling panels’ white surface reflects 85% of light to illuminate the interior spaces.

In the patient waiting areas, natural light enters through the floor-to-ceiling glass along the exterior walls. Enhancing this warm, calming atmosphere, WER considered adding natural wood interior finishes but realized the limitations of natural lumber. “We were looking for something to help ground this space,” Dickey said. 

Swann elaborated, “Trying to bring that warmth and comfort into the interior waiting spaces where you’re going to have patients and being able to do that in a medical space is hard. With Rockfon, we
were able to put in a metal panel that looks like wood and allows you that durability, sustainability and fireproof quality that you don’t get with wood.”

Presenting the desired biophilic appearance without the maintenance and performance issues of actual wood, WER specified Metalwood Maple Woodgrain Finish on Rockfon Planar Macroplus 6-inch linear metal ceilings.

“When it comes to being an architect or interior designer,” Swann said, “trying to create something from your thoughts to putting it on a page to making it an actual space — it’s complicated when you’re using all of these different types of materials that have limitations.”

Swann continued: “Rockfon has this modularity to it and this adaptability to allow you to create the scene that you’re trying to develop. I really like working with Rockfon. They’re easy to work with. They’re efficient. They get us samples rapidly, on time, and they help work through design aspects.”

“I really like working with Rockfon. They’re easy to work with. They’re efficient. They get us samples rapidly, on time, and they help work through design aspects.”

James Swann

AIA, associate and project architect for WER

For Premier Gastroenterology, he said, “We have the Macroplus linear metal ceilings. We have the Artic tile, which is kind of our utilitarian tile that’s in the hallway. And we have the Medical Standard that’s in all the medical spaces.” 

Dickey summarized, “We were able to use three different products here. Each one served a specific purpose and really helped us get the design and aesthetics that we needed.”

Want ceilings that balance hygiene and aesthetics? 
Experience it for yourself — request a sample today. 

NA, Stone Wool Campaign, Healthcare Coffee Table Book, Open Book, CTA

Premier Gastroenterology Associates (PGA), Premier Medical Plaza

Location:Little Rock, Arkansas, United States
Architect:WER Architects/Planners
Contractor:Clark Contractors
Installer:Platinum Drywall
Tiles:Rockfon Artic®, Rockfon® Medical Plus™, Rockfon® Planar® Macro and Planar® Macroplus® Linear Ceilings
Grids:Chicago Metallic® 1200 15/16"

More Healthcare Case Studies