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Medical Center of the Rockies opened to patients on Valentine's Day 2007, to relieve crowding in Poudre Valley Hospital, and provide better access to patients from outside of Fort Collins, Larimer County, and even the state of Colorado.
The hospital was originally founded by the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad in 1885 to serve its employees. The railroad sold the hospital to private investors in 1962, and they operated it until 1976, when it became a special district hospital. The current name dates from 1989, and the hospital moved to its current location in 2008. [3]
Hospital County City Bed count Trauma center Founded Notes AdventHealth Avista: Boulder: Louisville: 114: Level III: 1990: Formerly Avista Adventist Hospital [2] AdventHealth Castle Rock: Douglas: Castle Rock: 60: Level III: 2011: Formerly Castle Rock Adventist Hospital [2] AdventHealth Littleton: Arapahoe: Littleton: 231: Level II: 1989 ...
Heart of the Rockies Regional Medical Center, a hospital in Salida, Colorado Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Heart of the Rockies .
UCHealth Poudre Valley Hospital (PVH), located in Fort Collins, Colorado, is part of UCHealth [1] (University of Colorado Health) and serves northern Colorado, southern Wyoming, and western Nebraska. The hospital has 270 beds, and is a level III trauma center.
With all in hand, the Rockies were ready for their inaugural season with Bob Gebhard as general manager and Don Baylor as manager. From 1993 to 1999, the Rockies led Major League Baseball in attendance, starting with their inaugural year that saw 4,483,350 fans go to Mile High Stadium (used by the team for the first two seasons), a major league ...
The University of Colorado University Hospital was originally created on October 1, 1989, as a nonprofit corporation pursuant to an act of the Colorado General Assembly, and after the act was declared unconstitutional by the Colorado Supreme Court in 1990, was recreated in 1991 as the University of Colorado Hospital Authority as a government ...
McGregor's initials were placed among the Rockies' retired numbers in 2010. On April 20, 2010, McGregor was found dead at the age of 47 in a Salt Lake City hotel room while on a business trip. He was in his seventeenth season with the Rockies, his ninth as club president. Initial indications were that he died of natural causes.