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Remodeled Carmichaels Clinic unveiled to the public

By Mike Jones, For The Greene County Messenger 3 min read
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Various dignitaries gather outside the Carmichaels Clinic in Cumberland Township before a ribbon-cutting ceremony and open house Monday morning to unveil the $1.9 million renovation project. (Photo by Mike Jones)

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The changes to the remodeled Carmichaels ClinicĢƵ exterior are quite stunning, while the interior looks like a modern medical clinic. (Photos by Mike Jones)

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Mike Jones

Mike Jones

The Carmichaels ClinicĢƵ new main wing has six examination rooms, including this one.

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People gather in the Carmichaels ClinicĢƵ waiting area while taking a tour of the remodeled medical facility during an open house Monday.

news@greenecountymessenger.com

Dr. Daniel Holt drove past the Carmichaels Clinic on Sunday night and thought about all of the major historical moments that have occurred around the world in the more than six decades since the location opened in 1961.

Yet, during that entire time the medical clinic along West George Street in Cumberland Township remained steadfast in its mission to provide health care to area residents, even if the building was showing its age.

“In the midst of all that change … the one thing that didn’t change was the care at this clinic,” Holt said.

But the biggest change in the clinicĢƵ history was unveiled to the public Monday showing off the $1.9 million renovation over the past 18 months that remodeled the exterior and transformed the medical space inside. Holt, who is the medical director for Centerville Clinics that oversees the Carmichaels location, noted that the medical staff never stopped working during the renovation, including offering care in mobile units since construction began in March 2022.

“The building is nice. The building is pretty,” Holt said. “But itĢƵ really the people who work in this building day after day that I’m thankful for.”

Barry Niccolai, the executive director of Centerville Clinics, called the renovation both a “humbling moment” and “bold reflection” of the organizationĢƵ vision for the future with the remodeled Carmichaels Clinic.

He added that patients entering through the clinicĢƵ doors may be feeling scared or sad due to their medical ailments, so a comfortable environment will hopefully lift their spirits while they’re getting checkups or undergoing treatment.

“Today is significant for so many reasons,” he said during Monday morningĢƵ ribbon-cutting ceremony and open house. “We’ve literally transformed this building.”

The changes to the exterior are quite stunning, while the interior looks like a modern medical clinic.

The new main wing has six examination rooms, a laboratory, a social worker office, work stations for medical assistants and individual offices for each of the three medical providers based at the location. There is also be a separate entrance and negative pressure room to treat patients with respiratory diseases after the COVID-19 pandemic illustrated the need for segregated areas in the clinic.

Meanwhile, the behavioral health area will include therapy rooms and a community room, while part of that wing will be constructed for the eventual expansion for a dental services department.

“ItĢƵ not just the pretty shell,” said Ken Kulak, who is president of Monongahela-based Kulak-George Architects that designed the remodeled clinic. “ItĢƵ the things on the inside you don’t see.”

That is expected to help the medical staff provide even better care for patients. Nancy Nelish, a receptionist at the clinic, said the renovation reconfigured the building to utilize spaces that were rarely used before. She has worked at the clinic for 20 years, so she was stunned by the clinicĢƵ transformation when the staff came back into the building in late June after working out of mobile units on the property for more than a year.

“Everything seems to be more of a flow than before,” Nelish said of the layout. “Of course itĢƵ nice to look at (and have) more space.”

Nearly half the $1.9 million project was funded using $945,324 in American Rescue Plan Act money, with the remainder being paid for by Centerville Clinics.

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