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Universities and colleges in Knoxville, Tennessee (2 C, 7 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Knoxville, Tennessee" The following 35 pages are in this category, out of 35 total.
Clearing of the land to make way for the Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital, replacing the old Children's Memorial Hospital The rooftop helipad of Lurie Children's Hospital. The new 1.25-million-square-foot (116-thousand-square-metre) [48] building cost $605 million (excluding land) and was completed in June 2012.
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Jefferson Memorial Hospital (Jefferson City) Johnson City Medical Center (Johnson City) Johnson County Community Hospital (Mountain City, Tennessee) LaFollette Medical Center (LaFollette) Laughlin Memorial Hospital (Greeneville, Tennessee) Le Bonheur Children's Medical Center, Memphis; LeConte Medical Center (Sevierville, Tennessee)
The neighboring Lurie Children's Hospital, also affiliated with Northwestern, is the sixth tallest hospital facility in the country. [ 36 ] In 2011, demolition began on the building that was occupying 259 E. Erie Street to make way for the construction of the new Northwestern Outpatient Pavilion. [ 37 ]
St. Luke's Children's Hospital Boise Idaho 113 4 Advocate Children's Hospital: Oak Lawn and Park Ridge Illinois: 250 3 1 Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago: Chicago: Illinois 360 Level I Pediatric [5] 3 10 The Children's Hospital of Illinois: Peoria: Illinois 144 Level I Pediatric [5] 3 1 La Rabida Children's Hospital ...
By 1807, the Knoxville Gazette reported that 200 settlers a day were passing through the city on their way further west. Further north in Knox County, Adair's Fort, built by John Adair in Fountain City , protected settlers traveling westward on the Emory Road .
The Emory Place Historic District consists of 23 contributing buildings and one contributing object (the "Doughboy" statue on the front lawn of the Knoxville High School building). Most of the buildings were constructed in the early 1900s, with the two oldest– 6-12 Emory Place and 15-17 Emory Place– completed in 1890.