Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Plano broke ground on Oct. 21, 2025, on a $343 million expansion project designed to transform the medical campus by 2028, according to localprofile.com.
The project will include a new eight-story patient tower and a six-story parking garage. Completion is planned for fall 2028.
Hospital officials said the tower will significantly expand the hospital's capacity, which is much needed for those patients requiring intensive and critical care, localprofile.com reported. Collin County's population is growing rapidly.
The new tower will be adjacent to the existing tower on the campus's east end; it will be sited in an area now occupied by parking and the hospital's helipad. Upon completion, the helipad will move to the new tower's roof, according to localprofile.com.
When the tower is finished, Texas Health Plano will offer nearly 400 licensed acute and critical care beds, an increase from the current 230.
The facility will include 563 beds in all that encompass behavioral health, women's services and neonatal care. The basement level will connect to existing service corridors while housing an expanded pharmacy, according to localprofile.com.
Texas Health Plano's expansion continues a plan to strengthen specialty services. The hospital recently renovated its neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), which now features 42 beds and seven private rooms that allow families to stay close to their newborns during treatment, according to localprofile.com.
In addition, construction is under way on a new operating room that's dedicated to advanced neuroscience and cardiovascular procedures. The surgical suite will feature advanced technology for multidisciplinary operations, including transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) and endovascular aneurysm repair, according to localprofile.com.
"These expansions enable Texas Health Plano to grow with our community and to meet its evolving needs," Fraser Hay, Texas Health Plano president, previously said.









