The polyclinic building is new and modern. Parking is nearby. The location is convenient, public transport is within walking distance.
The area is large and young, and there are investigative queues. The quality of services is the same as everywhere else in the medical field, no better, no worse.
Overall, normal impressions.
The star was removed not by the clinic, but by its designers. The first question you ask yourself when you get here is who builds like this?
On the ground floor there is a reception and a cloakroom. There are tables for changing babies and several classrooms. And then the quest begins.
The building is huge, with two staircases at opposite ends, and an elevator somewhere in between. If you need to go up a couple of floors, you need to walk around half of the clinic to the elevator, and then walk another half floor to find the right office.
Due to the fact that the offices are arranged in a circle, the numbering is not continuous. There may be an office 210 next to it and 290 next to it. I did not understand the logic of this arrangement. Sometimes there are signs indicating which offices are located. But it doesn't help much.
The doors where the elevator is located are the same as the doors of the offices. And the "elevator" sign is written in the same size and font as the numbering of the offices. If you don't know that there should be an elevator somewhere, you'll walk around in circles.
The staff is the same as in all state polyclinics. I didn't have to be treated, but they came running for help. Literally.
Coupons are a problem, just like everywhere else. Waiting lists for pediatricians, lack of specialists.
A very nice and comfortable clean clinic.
There is one drawback, I would like pediatricians to take in their time, and there should not be many qualified ones, otherwise sometimes even basic questions cannot be answered.