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The first phase of the project, The Domain, opened on March 9, 2007, and includes 700,000 square feet (65,000 m 2) of restaurants, office space, upscale retail stores, apartments, and a hotel. [18] The retail portion of the project has attracted many retailers and restaurants new to the Austin market. An 80,000 sq ft (7,400 m 2).
Cook Children's Medical Center: Fort Worth: Texas: II Covenant Children's Hospital: Lubbock: Texas: II Covenant Medical Center: Lubbock: Texas: II Del Sol Medical Center: El Paso: Texas: 350: II Dell Children's Medical Center of Central Texas: Austin: Texas: 248: I Dell Seton Medical Center at The University of Texas: Austin: Texas: 211: I ...
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Dell Children's Medical Center of Central Texas is a pediatric acute care hospital located in Austin, Texas. [1] Serving a 46-county area and beyond, the hospital has 262 beds [2] with an additional 72 beds available beginning fall 2022. [3] It is a member of Ascension and is affiliated with Dell Medical School at The University of Texas. [4]
It is on land owned by the University of Texas at Austin. Central Health leases the land, and in turn the owner and operator of the hospital building, Seton Healthcare Family, subleases it from Central Health. [1] Dell Seton is a Level 1 Trauma Center serving 11 counties in Central Texas. It is a comprehensive stroke center and STEMI center.
Harold Frederick Shipman was born on 14 January 1946 on the Bestwood Estate, a council estate [4] in Nottingham, the second of three children. His father, also Harold Frederick Shipman (1914–1985), was a lorry driver; his mother was Vera (née Brittan; 1919–1963). [5] [6] His working-class parents were devout Methodists. [5] [6]
The Rainey Street neighborhood was rezoned as part of Austin's central business district in 2004. The hope at the time was to encourage development near the Austin Convention Center and the since-built Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center. But while grander development has stalled, bars and eateries have flocked to Rainey, since ...
In 1929 the Austin City Council renamed the hospital after hospital board chairperson Robert J. Brackenridge. [3] In 1969, [ 2 ] a replacement building opened, with a price tag of $43 million. It eventually housed 363 beds, [ 3 ] as the final phase opened in 1984.