Greaney, J.
By statute,3 a substantial capital expenditure cannot be made for the construction of any part of a health care facility without a prior administrative determination by the Department of Public Health (department) that there is a need for the facility. The Medical Area Total Energy Plant, Inc., an urban renewal corporation formed pursuant to G. L. c. 121A, is in the process of constructing a total energy plant (plant or project) on land owned by Harvard in Boston. The plant is designed to provide electricity, steam, and chilled water to the members of the Medical Area Service Corporation (MASCO), several of which are health care facilities (see note 2, supra). The plant would replace the existing Harvard steam plant on Blackfan Street, which presently supplies part of the energy requirements of some of the MASCO institutions but which is, or will be, increasingly inadequate to meet these requirements. In addition, the project will provide some nonelectrical services, free of charge, to the nearby publicly assisted Mission Park Housing Project. The plaintiffs filed an action in the Superior Court pursuant to the provisions of G. L. c. 111, § 25G,4 against MATEP, MASCO, MASCO’s members [245]*245(collectively referred to as the private defendants), the department and the Commissioner of Public Health (public defendants), seeking orders to halt the construction of the plant and to compel a determination of its need by the department pursuant to the provisions of G. L. c. 111, § 25C.5 All the defendants moved to dismiss the complaint under Mass.R.Civ.P. 12 (b) (6), 365 Mass. 755 (1974).6 A Superior Court judge allowed all the motions without opinion and entered judgments dismissing the action.7 [246]*246We affirm the result, modifying the judgment as to the private defendants to reflect the consideration of their motion as a rule 56 motion.
The relevant undisputed facts are these. On April 2, 1975, Harvard’s financial vice president wrote to the department requesting an advisory ruling pursuant to the provisions of G. L. c. 30A, § 8,8 and the department’s own regulations,9 that the proposed energy plant which Harvard intended to build on its land in the vicinity of the Harvard Medical School would not be subject to the department’s jurisdiction. The letter outlined the anatomy of the project in this fashion: the plant would be constructed and owned by MATEP, and MATEP’s stock in turn would be owned either 100% by an affiliate of First National City Bank of New York (Citicorp), or alternatively, 80% by Citicorp and 20% by Harvard. The construction financing would be provided or arranged for by Citicorp and the permanent loan (approximately 80% of the construction total) would be borrowed from insurance companies or other institutional lenders. After construction MATEP would lease the plant to MASCO, which [247]*247would operate it for approximately thirty-five years,10 until MATEP’s indebtedness on the permanent loan should be discharged. Under requirements contracts with each of its members, MASCO would agree to provide, and each of the members would agree to receive and pay for, all their electricity, steam, and chilled water to the extent that the plant should be able to supply them. It was not contemplated that any member would pay for utilities it would not use. After the MASCO lease terminates and the indebtedness of MATEP is discharged, Harvard will have the option to purchase the plant from MATEP at fair market value. Harvard is informally related to the other MASCO members (with the exception of the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy) because it uses their facilities and their staffs for the clinical instruction of Harvard Medical School students and to further its interest in medical research. Thus, at the time of its request for an advisory ruling, it was contemplated that Harvard (which had proposed the plant after extensive studies of the existing and future energy requirements of the institutions) would exercise its option to purchase the plant and agree thereafter to continue to make utilities available to members at Harvard’s cost.
Based upon the presentation made to it by Harvard as to the details of plant construction, ownership, and operation, the department on August 18, 1975, issued the requested advisory ruling to the effect that the plant would not be "part of’ an existing health care facility, that the department had no jurisdiction over the pro[248]*248posed project, and that construction could proceed without application for or receipt of a determination of need. On October 9,1975, the plant received approval from the Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) as a privately initiated urban renewal project under the provisions of G. L. c. 121A, and on October 6,1977, amendments to the project’s original c. 121A application were approved by the BRA. Extensive litigation instituted by Boston Edison Company followed on the heels of the BRA’s approval of the plant as an urban renewal project, all of which was concluded favorably to the plant’s construction.11 The project is now well under way, and by April 6,1978, more than forty-two million dollars had been expended on land acquisition and the plant’s construction. With the facts thus summarized, we turn to the substantive issues raised by the appeal.
The parties differ sharply as to the type of project that should be considered as part of a health care facility for purposes of the application of G. L. c. 111, §§ 25B-25G. The plaintiffs seek an expansive reading of the phrase "any part of’ a health care facility (G. L. c. 111, § 25B), so that virtually any project undertaken by the health care institutions mentioned in the statute, no matter where located or however owned, would require a determination of need. The private defendants, on the other hand, read the statute restrictively and argue that it applies only to the construction of strictly medically oriented patient care facilities, such as expanded clinical services or additional bed space. With these contentions in mind, we proceed to examine relevant legislative history and the department’s administrative ruling ultimately concluding that this particular project does not constitute part of a health care facility.
[249]*2491. Relevant legislative history. During its 1971 session the Legislature reacted to public concern over rising costs of health care by considering regulatory cost control techniques for large capital investments by hospitals and other health care institutions. The requirement of a prior administrative determination of need for new or expanded health care facilities was selected as an appropriate device to place controls on such costs.12 Thus, St. 1971, c. 1080, the immediate predecessor of G. L. c. 111, §§ 25B-25G, was enacted as an emergency measure on November 15, 1971, "to provide forthwith for the prevention of unnecessary expansion of health care facilities....” Section 3 of the statute defined health care facilities subject to the law as noted in the margin,13 and § 1 established departmental determination of need as a prerequisite to the construction, expansion, or major renovation of any part [250]*250or the whole of a health care facility.
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Greaney, J.
By statute,3 a substantial capital expenditure cannot be made for the construction of any part of a health care facility without a prior administrative determination by the Department of Public Health (department) that there is a need for the facility. The Medical Area Total Energy Plant, Inc., an urban renewal corporation formed pursuant to G. L. c. 121A, is in the process of constructing a total energy plant (plant or project) on land owned by Harvard in Boston. The plant is designed to provide electricity, steam, and chilled water to the members of the Medical Area Service Corporation (MASCO), several of which are health care facilities (see note 2, supra). The plant would replace the existing Harvard steam plant on Blackfan Street, which presently supplies part of the energy requirements of some of the MASCO institutions but which is, or will be, increasingly inadequate to meet these requirements. In addition, the project will provide some nonelectrical services, free of charge, to the nearby publicly assisted Mission Park Housing Project. The plaintiffs filed an action in the Superior Court pursuant to the provisions of G. L. c. 111, § 25G,4 against MATEP, MASCO, MASCO’s members [245]*245(collectively referred to as the private defendants), the department and the Commissioner of Public Health (public defendants), seeking orders to halt the construction of the plant and to compel a determination of its need by the department pursuant to the provisions of G. L. c. 111, § 25C.5 All the defendants moved to dismiss the complaint under Mass.R.Civ.P. 12 (b) (6), 365 Mass. 755 (1974).6 A Superior Court judge allowed all the motions without opinion and entered judgments dismissing the action.7 [246]*246We affirm the result, modifying the judgment as to the private defendants to reflect the consideration of their motion as a rule 56 motion.
The relevant undisputed facts are these. On April 2, 1975, Harvard’s financial vice president wrote to the department requesting an advisory ruling pursuant to the provisions of G. L. c. 30A, § 8,8 and the department’s own regulations,9 that the proposed energy plant which Harvard intended to build on its land in the vicinity of the Harvard Medical School would not be subject to the department’s jurisdiction. The letter outlined the anatomy of the project in this fashion: the plant would be constructed and owned by MATEP, and MATEP’s stock in turn would be owned either 100% by an affiliate of First National City Bank of New York (Citicorp), or alternatively, 80% by Citicorp and 20% by Harvard. The construction financing would be provided or arranged for by Citicorp and the permanent loan (approximately 80% of the construction total) would be borrowed from insurance companies or other institutional lenders. After construction MATEP would lease the plant to MASCO, which [247]*247would operate it for approximately thirty-five years,10 until MATEP’s indebtedness on the permanent loan should be discharged. Under requirements contracts with each of its members, MASCO would agree to provide, and each of the members would agree to receive and pay for, all their electricity, steam, and chilled water to the extent that the plant should be able to supply them. It was not contemplated that any member would pay for utilities it would not use. After the MASCO lease terminates and the indebtedness of MATEP is discharged, Harvard will have the option to purchase the plant from MATEP at fair market value. Harvard is informally related to the other MASCO members (with the exception of the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy) because it uses their facilities and their staffs for the clinical instruction of Harvard Medical School students and to further its interest in medical research. Thus, at the time of its request for an advisory ruling, it was contemplated that Harvard (which had proposed the plant after extensive studies of the existing and future energy requirements of the institutions) would exercise its option to purchase the plant and agree thereafter to continue to make utilities available to members at Harvard’s cost.
Based upon the presentation made to it by Harvard as to the details of plant construction, ownership, and operation, the department on August 18, 1975, issued the requested advisory ruling to the effect that the plant would not be "part of’ an existing health care facility, that the department had no jurisdiction over the pro[248]*248posed project, and that construction could proceed without application for or receipt of a determination of need. On October 9,1975, the plant received approval from the Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) as a privately initiated urban renewal project under the provisions of G. L. c. 121A, and on October 6,1977, amendments to the project’s original c. 121A application were approved by the BRA. Extensive litigation instituted by Boston Edison Company followed on the heels of the BRA’s approval of the plant as an urban renewal project, all of which was concluded favorably to the plant’s construction.11 The project is now well under way, and by April 6,1978, more than forty-two million dollars had been expended on land acquisition and the plant’s construction. With the facts thus summarized, we turn to the substantive issues raised by the appeal.
The parties differ sharply as to the type of project that should be considered as part of a health care facility for purposes of the application of G. L. c. 111, §§ 25B-25G. The plaintiffs seek an expansive reading of the phrase "any part of’ a health care facility (G. L. c. 111, § 25B), so that virtually any project undertaken by the health care institutions mentioned in the statute, no matter where located or however owned, would require a determination of need. The private defendants, on the other hand, read the statute restrictively and argue that it applies only to the construction of strictly medically oriented patient care facilities, such as expanded clinical services or additional bed space. With these contentions in mind, we proceed to examine relevant legislative history and the department’s administrative ruling ultimately concluding that this particular project does not constitute part of a health care facility.
[249]*2491. Relevant legislative history. During its 1971 session the Legislature reacted to public concern over rising costs of health care by considering regulatory cost control techniques for large capital investments by hospitals and other health care institutions. The requirement of a prior administrative determination of need for new or expanded health care facilities was selected as an appropriate device to place controls on such costs.12 Thus, St. 1971, c. 1080, the immediate predecessor of G. L. c. 111, §§ 25B-25G, was enacted as an emergency measure on November 15, 1971, "to provide forthwith for the prevention of unnecessary expansion of health care facilities....” Section 3 of the statute defined health care facilities subject to the law as noted in the margin,13 and § 1 established departmental determination of need as a prerequisite to the construction, expansion, or major renovation of any part [250]*250or the whole of a health care facility. Chapter 1080 contained a termination date of May 31, 1972; obviously it was designed to institute a temporary system of administrative controls over major construction by health care institutions while the Legislature gained some experience in the area, studied the effect of the temporary controls, and drafted more comprehensive permanent legislation.
In the same year that c. 1080 was adopted, the subject it addressed was referred, together with drafts of proposed permanent legislation,14 to a Joint Special Committee of the House and Senate on Health Benefits and Health Services (committee). Ultimately, the committee drafted 1972 Senate Doc. No. 1500, which, with changes not relevant here, was enacted as St. 1972, c. 776, § 3, effective June 1,1972, and codified as G. L. c. 111, §§ 25B-25G.
In connection with its study, the committee prepared a copious report (1972 House Doc. No. 5968) which indicated on the whole that the focus of legislative concern under G. L. c. 111, §§ 25B-25G, should be directed principally to the unnecessary expansion by health care institutions of their patient care facilities. A case in point was the committee’s reference to the "proliferation of open-heart surgery facilities during the 1960’s,” described as "little used” and appropriate for "remedial action.” House Doc. No. 5968, supra at 13-14. Particularly significant also were the committee’s observations, noted fully in the margin, that it was adopting a narrow definition of institutions subject to the statute in order to "not unintentionally sweep into the process certain facilities which might best be excluded”15 (id. at 23), and to set out suffi[251]*251cient policy guidelines to provide "reasonable bounds on its interpretation” by the agency administering it (id. at 26), "consistent with the fact that we are here dealing with a very fluid, evolving body of knowledge”16 (id. at 27).
The report also catalogued all of the determination of need dispositions made under c. 1080 up to the time of the hearings. Id. at 57-67. This summary revealed that most of the projects considered by the department under the [252]*252temporary legislation concerned patient care services such as construction of a new pediatric wing17 or a cancer center,18 while a few dealt with projects incidental to hospital health care functions such as construction of a transformer vault,19 and in one case, expansion of kitchen facilities.20
Finally, to complete the legislative history, G. L. c. 111, § 25B, was amended by means of St. 1975, c. 881, § 3, to add to the enumerated list of institutions subject to the law "a clinical laboratory subject to licensing under [G. L. c. 111D].” This last amendment rounded out the definition of a health care facility to its present form as set forth in note 5, supra.
An analysis of this legislative history leads to a number of conclusions. First of all, the legislative approach throughout has been to list specifically the types of patient care institutions which are "health care facilities,” rather than to formulate a broad, generic definition of the term. In order to add a new facility not already listed in the statute — clinical laboratories — the Legislature deemed it necessary in 1975 to amend the list; a fact indicative of legislative wariness about "not unintentionally sweeping] into the process certain facilities which might best be excluded.” 1972 House Doc. No. 5968, supra at 23. It is appropriate also to keep in mind the familiar rule of statutory construction that general language used in a statute following specific language in an enumeration is meant to cover only objects similar to those enumerated. 2A Sands, Sutherland Statutory Construction [253]*253§ 47.17 (1973). The combination of this rule with the specific enumeration of institutions subject to the law and the content of the 1975 amendment indicate that the words "part of a health care facility” were not meant to include every project built by or for a health care institution under the statute’s coverage. As aptly and succinctly observed by Mr. Justice Brandéis, "[f]ew laws are of universal application.” Truax v. Corrigan, 257 U.S. 312, 355 (1921) (dissenting opinion).
With this in mind, we think a reasonable reading of the statute would require a prior administrative determination of need for all new construction and all major renovations or expansions by health care institutions which create new, or augment existing, patient care services. For example, a hospital’s decision to build a new wing to increase its bed space, or to add a thoracic surgery unit where it previously had none, would clearly need prior approval by the department. We also think it likely that a determination of need would be required for any major hospital project not directly linked to patient care services if it would constitute an integral part of the hospital’s plant. Thus, if a hospital decided to build its own standby generator or central air conditioning system, it might require a certificate of need because the project would be an integral part of the total plant, and, therefore, part of a health care facility. Under some circumstances, an energy plant built for, and belonging exclusively to, a hospital might fall within the coverage of the statute.
However, we also perceive in the legislative history an intention to allow health care facilities some degree of flexibility in determining their operational necessities — albeit under the department’s watchful eye. It cannot be said that the legislation was attempting to control all health care costs,21 nor did it seek to discourage some [254]*254measure of institutional free enterprise on the part of hospitals, which, if prudently exercised, might result in a lowering of costs, ultimately benefiting the consumer. Also, the department’s role was to be a major one both in defining the contours of the statute, and in considering its applicability on an ad hoc basis to projects that did not fit traditional norms.22 As noted in the margin, the Legislature, if it wished to include the type of project under construction here, could have easily done so, as the Congress did in comparable Federal health planning legislation enacted prior to the 1975 amendment to G. L. c. 111, § 25B.23
To fall under G. L. c. 111, § 25B-25G, then, a project which will service health care institutions must bear a substantial nexus to the institutions. That nexus must arise from some combination of functional, legal, administrative, and operational ties between the project and the institutions that leads to the conclusion that it is an integral part of the institutions it services. The energy plant under consideration in this case (as the agency found) lacks those connections. It is physically located [255]*255apart from the health care facilities and will provide a significant share of its energy services to nonhealth care facilities such as the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy, certain schools at Harvard, and the Mission Park Housing Project. Moreover, it will be constructed by a G. L. c. 121A corporation (MATEP), which is not a health care facility; leased to and operated by a corporation (MASCO) which is not a health care facility; financed by the provision of equity capital to MATEP and the guaranty of MASCO’s loan by a corporation (Harvard) which is not a health care facility; and ultimately will be subject to purchase by Harvard. The plant is substantively no different from an energy plant built to service MASCO’s members and leased to MASCO by Boston Edison. No one would seriously maintain that a plant built by Boston Edison under similar circumstances would require a determination of need. We conclude that this plant is not part of a health care facility subject to the provisions of G. L. c. 111, §§ 25B-25G.
Finally, we are not dissuaded from this conclusion by the plaintiffs’ argument that the statutory policy of G. L. c. 111, § 25C (that the "department... encourage appropriate allocation of private and public health care resources ... so that adequate health care services will be ... available ... at the lowest reasonable aggregate cost”) will be frustrated if we do not hold this plant subject to a determination of need. The brief answer to this contention is that if the plant is not covered by the definition adopted by the Legislature, no purpose of the statute can be frustrated by its omission, particularly where the statute’s history indicates that the Legislature consciously chose to limit the determination of need concept. Nor do we find merit in the contention that public policy is being frustrated by allowing the half-completed plant to proceed. In this regard, we observe that the National Health Planning and Resources Development Act specifies two of its national health priorities in the formulation of national health planning goals to be: "[t]he development of [256]*256multi-institutional arrangements for the sharing of support services necessary to all health service institutions” (42 U.S.C. § 300k-2[5] [1976]) and "[t]he promotion of an effective energy conservation and fuel efficiency program for health service institutions to reduce the rate of growth of demand for energy” (42 U.S.C. § 300k-2[11]).24 This project acts in furtherance of both of these commendable policy goals.
2. The agency ruling. The department’s ruling issued on August 18,1975, buttresses our conclusion. In the ruling the department explained that neither the statute nor its own regulations provided any express guidance as to how the phrase "part of a health care facility” should be interpreted in light of the facts contained in Harvard’s letter. Because of the absence of statutory or regulatory precedent on the point, the following test was adopted: "the Department has looked to see whether the project was legally, administratively, financially, physically, and, in terms of its services, so intertwined with the particular facility that it would be appropriate to view it functionally as part of the health care facility.”
The department pointed out that before it promulgated the determination of need regulations, the Public Health Council (which by virtue of c. 111, §§ 2, 3, acts as. its advisor) had, on an analogous issue, considered and rejected the inclusion of professional office buildings (built in connection with a hospital) within the phrase "part of a health care facility.”25 Applying the criteria specified [257]*257above to the information furnished by Harvard in generally the same manner as we have, the department concluded that it would be inappropriate to consider the project subject to the statute,26 because the plant was not "legally, administratively, financially, physically, and... functionally [a] part of [a] health care facility.”
The plaintiffs maintain, however, that the department’s own regulations were intended to cover utility projects such as the plant. They refer us to the Massachusetts Determination of Need Regulations, Part 5 (37) ("unique application”), as amended, 19 Mass. Register at 7 (August 26, 1976). That section provides in subpart (d) for a unique determination of need application for "a project which is inherently not comparable in nature and [258]*258is concerned solely with construction involving heating, ventilation, parking, dietary services, administrative services, or similar equipment, services, or facilities; provided, that such construction is consistent with the existing scope of health care services offered by the applicant, and further that the project is not directly related to the medical care or treatment of patients.” Any measure of apparent inconsistency between this particular regulation and the ruling as to the energy plant is reconciled by viewing the regulation (as the department apparently did) as applying to on site construction of special projects integrally related to the functioning of the health care institutions they service, such as the examples previously mentioned of a standby generator or a central air conditioning system; but as not applying to the distinct venture embodied in this plant, separated as it is at arm’s length from the health care facilities to which it will supply energy. In our opinion, this regulation, and the law it implements, were not designed to stifle a hospital’s ingenuity in seeking out a cheaper energy supply from a private source.
"While an administrative or executive interpretation cannot bind the courts, weight should be given 'to any reasonable construction of a regulatory statute adopted by the agency charged with ... [its] enforcement.’ ” School Comm. of Springfield v. Board of Educ., 362 Mass. 417,441 n.22 (1972), quoting Investment Co. Inst. v. Camp, 401 U.S. 617, 626-627 (1971). Amherst-Pelham Regional Sch. Comm. v. Department of Educ., 376 Mass. 480, 491 (1978), and cases cited. In the absence of any conflicting legislative history or language in the statute to contradict the department’s determination, we find that determination to be reasonable. See Lewis v. Richardson, 428 F. Supp. 1164, 1169 (D. Mass. 1977). Indeed, with express legislative indication that the department was to play an important role in implementing the statute’s purposes, the conclusion reached by the department that the MATEP-MASCO project was not subject to a determina[259]*259tion of need is entitled to particular deference by the courts. Thus, the legislative background of the statute and the administrative handling of its policies converge to a common point: that the construction of this project does not require a prior determination of need.
3. Disposition. In the context of this case, the plaintiffs’ action under § 25G of c. 111 against the private defendants is similar to an action for declaratory relief seeking a determination as to whether the energy plant was subject to prior regulatory approval. Because of this and the rule 56 aspects of the case, an appropriate disposition requires that the judgment of dismissal as to those defendants be vacated. In its place is to be substituted a new judgment as to the private defendants, determining that the plant under construction is not subject to the provisions of G. L. c. 111, §§ 25B-25G. The judgment dismissing the action as to the public defendants is to stand as entered.
So ordered.