Baptist Health building-out primary care center in Mandarin

The city issued a permit Feb. 13 for the medical system to convert a former Office Depot along San Jose Boulevard.


Meyer Najem Construction is converting the former Office Depot in Mandarin Landing for a Baptist Primary Care center.
Meyer Najem Construction is converting the former Office Depot in Mandarin Landing for a Baptist Primary Care center.
Photo by Karen Brune Mathis
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Baptist Health is a permit closer to opening a Baptist Primary Care outpatient clinic in Mandarin Landing.

The city issued a permit Feb. 13 for Meyer Najem Construction LLC, a Jacksonville construction manager, to demolish and renovate the interior of the former Office Depot at 10601 San Jose Blvd., Building 200, at a project cost of $2.55 million.

Kasper architects + associates Inc. is the architect. Legacy Engineering Inc. is the civil engineer. Both are based in Jacksonville.

The build-out will include patient exam rooms, a lab, offices and more services in the 24,658-square-foot space. Office Depot closed in November 2020.

Baptist Health plans to open a primary care office in the former Office Depot in the reconfigured Mandarin Landing shopping center.

The city issued a permit June 7 for North Coast Construction Co. to renovate the building facade for Baptist Health at a construction cost of $1.33 million.

Landlord and property owner Regency Centers Corp. is renovating, demolishing and adding space at the 140,021-square-foot Mandarin Landing, which is on 17.3 acres north of Interstate 295.

Baptist Health said it is relocating two Mandarin medical offices into the former Office Depot building with an opening targeted for early 2024.

Baptist Health said two Baptist Primary Care offices – Mandarin North and Mandarin West – will relocate to the building, which will include a laboratory “to make outpatient blood work easily accessible to Baptist Primary Care patients.”

“These two primary care practices have dedicated themselves to caring for generations of Mandarin families,” said Catherine Graham, Baptist Health senior vice president of Clinical Service Lines and Ambulatory Business Development, in March.

She said the location will allow Baptist Health to continue serving its long-standing patients “while at same time enabling convenient access to care for the many new families moving into our community daily.”

 

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