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Mercy Hospital Cedar Rapids Iowa, 1903 Building, Now Demolished. The new facility opened in 1903 as a 100-bed, five-story hospital. The 1903 building served patients until 1971, when it was torn down because it no longer met hospital regulations. [4] Mercy's campus continued growing to meet demands. Major building efforts include the following ...
The hospital opening was scheduled for August 8, 2008. Due to an installation of information technology systems for the electronic medical record system, the opening was moved to September 5. [4] The hospital was scheduled to open with 400 employees, with a planned expansion to 1,200 with the final 100 being available by February 2009. [3]
In 1932, Dr. Herrick died, and his heirs converted the hospital into a non-profit corporation. By 1934, the hospital had 100 beds. The original Roosevelt Hospital building was demolished to accommodate additional wings and facilities which were added over time. In 1945, the hospital was again renamed Herrick Memorial Hospital, in honor of its ...
In 1945 Congress approved the construction of a 670-bed Aerial Debarkation Hospital and the reconstruction of the 150-bed Station Hospital, and the project was immediately begun in June. The designs for the Aerial Debarkation Hospital called for seven wards, six of 100 beds. The seventh, for 70 beds, would be for mental health patients.
The hospital raised more than $200,000 to build a new facility, which opened in 1917 at 19th Avenue and Downing Street in downtown Denver. The "beautiful, new, green and white" building opened with 100 beds and with what The Denver Post described at the time as "every article of equipment known to science." [15]
Sep. 29—WILKES-BARRE — Looking to correct a mistake made five years ago, Shane Casey went back to his original plan to open a 100-bed addiction treatment center. Casey needed the approval ...
Another 100 bed expansion took place in 1951 bringing capacity to 262 beds. In 1965, the facility was expanded again to 366 beds total. This last expansion included a new emergency room, a new maternity department, and a new intensive care department. The old Pacific Christian Hospital building was now gone. [3] A 30-bed psychiatric unit was ...
Hillsboro approved the new plans for a smaller hospital in February 2009, with Kaiser to begin construction in June 2009. [15] The new plans would have the $242 million hospital open in 2013 with 126 hospital beds on a campus of 850,000 square feet (79,000 m 2), with full build out on the site to be completed by 2040. [15] [16] [17]