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5136-38 Prince Street; 5140 Prince Street; 5144 Prince Street; 1695 Hollis Street Halifax NS 44°38′51″N 63°34′21″W / 44.6475°N 63.5724°W / 44.6475; -63.5724 ( Prince and Hollis Buildings
1472 Hollis Street 44°38′38″N 63°34′17″W / 44.64389°N 63.57139°W / 44.64389; -63.57139 ( Black-Binney A house reflective of the Palladian -inspired residences common during the late 18th and early 19th centuries in Eastern Canada ; notable residents include John Black , James Boyle Uniacke and Hibbert Binney
1649 Hollis Street Halifax Hotel 10 1996 Bank of Nova Scotia Building 1709 Hollis Street Halifax Office Building 6 1931 Halifax World Trade Centre 1800 Argyle Street Halifax Convention Centre and Hotel 18 (hotel) 14 (office building) Proposed complex to be built on site of former Halifax Herald Building [1] Westin Nova Scotian: 1181 Hollis Street
In 1998, Holles Street set up the Domino (Domiciliary Care In and Out of Hospital) and Home birth scheme through its team of community midwives. [8] The National Maternity Hospital Foundation, a charity which raises funds for a number of projects in the hospital with special emphasis on the neonatal intensive care unit, was established in 2012. [9]
Hollis Johnson's, the cozy, 1950s-style diner in back of the Westwood Drug Store, hosted Jerry West, John Wooden and a collection of UCLA stars.
Holliswood Hospital was a Hollis, Queens 100-bed psychiatric-specialty teaching hospital [1] affiliated with the New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine. [2] The hospital opened in 1986 [3] and closed in 2013. [4] [5] Their patients included teenagers. [6] The hospital was opened as a for-profit venture. [3]
Hollis Hospital was established originally for the care of 16 poor women, mainly the widows of workers in the Sheffield cutlery trades. The almshouses were further augmented and endowed by two of his sons (Thomas and John) in 1724 and 1726 respectively.
The former Booth Memorial Hospital in Flushing, now New York Presbyterian-Queens. Mount Sinai Queens, 25-10 30th Avenue, Astoria Queens.Formerly called Astoria General Hospital, opened on Flushing Avenue on November 1, 1892, moved to Crescent Street on May 4, 1896, gradually expanded to 30th Avenue, renamed Western Queens Community Hospital, acquired by Mount Sinai Hospital, and renamed Mount ...