
What You Should Know:
– Lake Nona Medical City is accelerating its growth as a national hub for integrated health innovation with two major milestones: the topping off of AdventHealth’s new robotic surgery-focused hospital and the expansion of the University of Central Florida (UCF) College of Nursing.
– AdventHealth’s 25-acre campus will feature “incisionless” histotripsy technology and collaborative surgical robots, while UCF’s new pavilion triples simulation capacity to address Florida’s critical nursing shortage. Together, these projects solidify Lake Nona’s model of co-locating care, research, and education to drive real-time medical advancements.
AdventHealth and UCF Redefine the ‘Medical City’ at Lake Nona
In the urban planning of healthcare, proximity has always been a luxury. Hospitals, universities, and research labs typically operate in silos, separated by miles and bureaucracy. Lake Nona Medical City was designed to break that model, and its latest phase of expansion suggests the experiment is not only working but accelerating.
Today, Lake Nona announced significant progress on two anchor institutions that define the district’s future: the topping off of AdventHealth’s new hospital and the opening of the University of Central Florida (UCF) College of Nursing’s expanded facility.
This isn’t just about new buildings; it’s about the convergence of high-tech surgical robotics with next-generation workforce training. By physically co-locating these assets, Lake Nona is creating a feedback loop where clinical innovation and education happen simultaneously.
AdventHealth: The Incisionless Hospital
AdventHealth’s new 10-story facility, slated to open in November 2026, is positioning itself as a “robotic and incisionless epicenter.” The hospital will feature histotripsy technology, a cutting-edge method that uses ultrasonic waves to destroy tumors without a single incision.
Beyond histotripsy, the facility will integrate collaborative robots for surgical support and “patient smart rooms,” signaling a shift toward a more autonomous, data-driven care environment. Initially opening with 95 beds, the structure is built to scale, with the capacity to add another 200 beds as demand grows.
“We are bringing nationally recognized care to Lake Nona, so that no one will need to travel out of the area to get the specialized care they need,” said Chase Tikker, President and CEO of AdventHealth Lake Nona.
UCF: Tripling Simulation Capacity to Fight the Nursing Crisis
Parallel to the clinical expansion is a massive investment in human capital. The UCF College of Nursing has opened the Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion, a facility that directly addresses Florida’s projected shortage of 37,000 registered nurses within the next decade.
The expansion allows UCF to increase its output by 150 newly licensed eligible nurses per year. Crucially, the facility triples the college’s simulation capacity through the Helene Fuld Health Trust STIM Center. This center features dedicated spaces for immersive AR/VR learning, preparing students for high-stakes environments like critical care and pediatrics before they ever touch a real patient.
“By co-locating a top-ranked nursing program with destination hospitals and research centers, we’re creating a pipeline where training, clinical experience and innovation happen side by side,” noted Gloria Caulfield, Vice President of Strategic Alliances for Lake Nona.

