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Texas Health Resources to open McKinney hospital campus in 2028

A new Texas Health hospital is set to bring at least 60 hospital beds to north McKinney.

The hospital campus is being developed by the faith-based nonprofit health system to serve the growing needs of North Texas, a Feb. 24 news release states. The facility is expected to open in 2028.

The specifics: The hospital campus is slated for a 51-acre site near the intersection of US 75 and Laud Howell Parkway in northeast McKinney, and will include both a hospital and a medical office building. The McKinney hospital will feature 60 beds when it opens, but officials plan to double the capacity in the future, the release states.

Quote of note: "This new facility will provide advanced medical care and emergency services to thousands of local families who deserve convenient, quality treatment close to home,” Texas Health CEO Barclay Berdan said in the release.

 
on the business beat
StatLab headquarters in McKinney opens Customer Innovation Lab

StatLab Medical Products, headquarters in McKinney, celebrated the opening of a new Customer Innovation Lab with a ribbon cutting in February.

In a nutshell: The new lab will be used for hands-on training, troubleshooting and guiding customers through real-world workflow applications, officials said. StatLab CEO Sung-Dae Hong said the lab will serve as a "showcase" for potential customers interested in purchasing StatLab equipment.

About the company: StatLab is a global company with manufacturing locations in England, Wales, Germany, Italy and Spain. The company has two manufacturing locations in North Texas: McKinney and Arlington. StatLab manufactures products and equipment supporting histology, cytology and microbiology laboratory work, according to its website.

  • 2090 Commerce Drive, McKinney

 
Stay In The Know
UNT faces $45M deficit following international graduate student enrollment decline

The University of North Texas is facing a roughly $45 million budget deficit for fiscal year 2025-26 after a drop in international graduate student enrollment and changes to the state funding formula, UNT president Harrison Keller said at a Feb. 19 board of regents meeting.

The gist: Changes to the funding formula in the last legislative session and a drop in international graduate student enrollment caused a state funding loss of about $32 million in instruction and operations funding for UNT.

The board of regents previously approved a $32 million deficit for FY 2025-26, but the international graduate student enrollment drop was higher than UNT officials expected, causing the funding loss to exceed the $32 million deficit the board approved, Keller said.

A budget report from Greg Anderson, the deputy chancellor for finance, shows international student enrollment has dropped from 6,200 students in fall 2024 to 3,400 students in fall 2025, giving the university a total deficit of about $45 million.

 
Permit Preview Wednesday
See 5 of the latest permits filed in the North Texas area

Renovations at local medical facilities are some of the new projects filed recently with the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation.

Here are five of the most expensive permits filed with TDLR for North Texas projects in the past week.

1. Parkhill Junior High and North Junior High at Richardson ISD

2. Alliance Embraer MRO

3. Garage and helipad for Medical City Fort Worth

4. Legacy ER and Urgent Care Frisco West

5. McIntyre Industrial Phase I buildings 1, 2 and 3

 

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