A Dallas-based hospital group owned by doctors broke ground in August on its Austin facility that will open in December 2014.

Forest Park Medical Center has three locations in the Dallas area with the most recent one having opened in May in Southlake. The hospital group is planning two other locations besides the Austin facility in Fort Worth and San Antonio.

"There was tremendous interest from local physicians in opening a facility in Austin," said Dr. Robert Wyatt, one of the founding doctors of FPMC.

The hospital is located on 8.5 acres of land on the south side of SH 45 N between MoPac and I-35. Wyatt said the location is convenient for both future patients and the physicians. Furthermore, the new facility will generate more than 300 new jobs.

"We're excited to have a new facility to add to our complex of health care," Austin Mayor Lee Leffingwell said. "It's going to have a big economic benefit to our resident base."

Derrick Evers, managing partner with FPMC's developer, the Neal Richards Group, said working with city officials and physicians has made for an easy project so far.

"The continued spirit of entrepreneurship and the way physicians have come together so rapidly and with such veracity has been great to watch," he said.

The Austin facility will be a four-story building measuring 145,000 square feet in size. It will have 10 operating rooms, two endoscopy suites for smaller procedures such as colonoscopies and an intensive-care unit with six beds as well as 45 patient rooms.

Wyatt said a group of more than 60 physicians approached FPMC about opening an Austin location. Those physicians will be the hospital's owners, and Wyatt said FPMC will be the largest physician-owned hospital in the Austin area.

"It's the difference between owning a house and renting," he said. "[The doctors] are able to control what they want."

The doctors were involved in all decisions of planning the new facility, including deciding the layout and flow of the hospital as well as the finishes.

"It's designed as an environment to comfort people," Wyatt said. "Patients [will] have lower stress levels and shorter stays."

Physicians will also work with a board of management to decide how the medical facility is run.

"Because physicians know how to take care of patients [and] they know the economic impact, they're best equipped to make those decisions," FPMC founder David Genecov said. "Out bottom line is the care of the patient."

Patient rooms will include standard hospital amenities but feature extra-large bathrooms. Some rooms will include an attached family suite that resembles a hotel suite with a microwave, refrigerator and pullout bed.

"This way a family cannot be disturbed when someone comes in at 2 in the morning," Wyatt said.

FPMC will also seek a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design designation just as it did for its other facilities, Wyatt said. The hospital will be built to use about 40 percent less water than other hospitals, will have a roof that allows the facility to recycle rainwater and will use low-energy lighting.

"The goal is how to make the hospital environmentally sensitive without compromising the patient experience," he said.