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The hospital had its origins in St Alfege's Hospital in Greenwich which by the 1960s was in need of replacement. [1] In order to build a hospital with a large enough capacity for the requirements of the local population (up to 800 beds) on a small site (less than 8 acres), a single large building was designed - Pevsner described it as "an unusually large enterprise to be undertaken by the ...
The Manhattan complex in 1979 The main entrance of St. Vincent's Hospital (1900), Greenwich Village, New York City. St. Vincent's Hospital was a 758-bed tertiary care teaching hospital, at Seventh Avenue and Greenwich Avenue on the border of Greenwich Village and Chelsea. It included: Level I Trauma Center and Critical Care Center
New York City Hospital, Pearl Street, Manhattan. (1864), 150 beds. New York City--the new Woman's Hospital, corner of Fiftieth Street and Fourth Avenue, Manhattan. (1876) New York Dispensary for Diseases of the Throat and Chest, (1840–1870). New York Infirmary, 127-129 Broad Street, Manhattan. See New York-Presbyterian/Lower Manhattan ...
In 2005 the affiliation with the NYU Medical Center ceased and the hospital reverted to the name New York Downtown Hospital. Following a full merger in 2013 with New York-Presbyterian Hospital, it was renamed New York-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Hospital. [7] Staff residence building. In 2005 the hospital discharged nearly 12,000 inpatients.
Gibbs College, New York City/Melville (1911–2009) Globe Institute of Technology , Manhattan (1985–2016) Long Island Business Institute, Flushing (2001–2024) [ 10 ] [ 11 ]
Lenox Health Greenwich Village is a 24-hour freestanding emergency department in Greenwich Village, Manhattan which is a division of Lenox Hill Hospital. It was originally built in 1964 as the headquarters of the National Maritime Union , and was later used as a hospital building by Saint Vincent's Hospital and then Northwell Health .
The Holy Cross School served the Hells Kitchen/Times Square area; circa 2011, it had about 300 students; [23] some students originated from areas outside of New York City and outside New York State; in 2013, the archdiocese announced that the school was to close; [2] the school had the possibility of remaining open if $720,000 in pledges to the ...
Metropolitan Hospital Center (MHC, also referred to as Metropolitan Hospital) is a hospital in East Harlem, New York City. It has been affiliated with New York Medical College since it was founded in 1875, [ 1 ] representing the oldest partnership between a hospital and a private medical school in the United States.