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sophisticated sissy
05-27-2008, 08:08 PM
11 Most Endangered

Charity Hospital and the Adjacent Neighborhood
Year Listed: 2008

Location: New Orleans, Louisiana

Current Status: Endangered


Threat: Deterioration, Development, Poor Public Policy


Once a prestigious center of medical training and a beacon for public health care, Charity Hospital now faces an uncertain future. Surrounded by flood waters when Hurricane Katrina shattered the levees around New Orleans, the Art Deco icon has been shuttered and vacant for nearly three years. Despite its legendary role in serving hundreds of thousands of uninsured patients and the critical need for medical facilities in New Orleans, this historic building continues to languish and remains vulnerable to demolition.

What you can do:

Write to Louisiana's Governor Bobby Jindal and the State's new Secretary of Health and Hospitals, Alan Levine, encouraging them to include data from the upcoming assessment of the Charity Hospital building (conducted by the Foundation for Historical Louisiana) as they plan future healthcare services for New Orleans.

Encourage Louisiana State University and the Veterans’ Administration to schedule regular public meetings so the local community can be informed and involved.

Help save Charity Hospital and other endangered places – donate to the 11 for the 11 Most Challenge.


In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the basement of Charity Hospital suffered water damage and some of the electrical and mechanical systems were damaged or destroyed. After the water receded, the medical community, the military and a number of volunteers pumped out the flooded basement, cleaned up the debris, and restored electrical power to make the building usable again, but the doors to the hospital were permanently locked when the building was deemed unsafe and unusable by the Louisiana State University (LSU) Medical System.

At present, LSU is moving forward with plans for a new medical complex alongside a new facility for the Veterans Administration (VA).

In addition to abandoning Charity Hospital and the former VA facilities, the plans for new construction call for the demolition of some 200 homes and buildings constructed prior to 1880 in 25 blocks of an adjacent National Register Historic District, despite the existence of a largely vacant site nearby.

In addition to providing homes for hundreds of people, the Mid-City neighborhood is also the location of several significant, historically important buildings, such as Deutsches Haus, a German social organization from the 1920s, and McDonogh No. 11 School, which dates to 1879.

Today, preservation groups are rallying to save Charity Hospital and protect it from deteriorating beyond repair. Beginning with an intervention grant from the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the Foundation for Historical Louisiana, in fulfilling its charge from the State Legislature, is continuing to raise funds for an independent assessment of the building.

The Foundation has hired RMJM Hillier of Philadelphia to assess the building's overall structural condition and its potential reuse for medical services. Grassroots organizations are also leading the charge in raising awareness on both a national and local level and galvanizing efforts to determine viable alternatives for the facility.

"The reuse potential as well as the architectural and cultural significance of Charity Hospital should not be ignored in the process of determining the fate of this historic treasure," says Richard Moe, president of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. "We cannot afford to stand idly by and allow the loss of such a valuable and architecturally significant building, along with the destruction of a large portion of the nearby historic neighborhood."

Charity Hospital is the premier example of Art Deco architecture in New Orleans and carries with it a historic legacy that reaches back more than 250 years. Classically designed with streamline elements, the H-shaped building was designed by the firm of Weiss, Dreyfous & Seiferth, which also designed the Art Deco State Capitol in Baton Rouge.

Founded in 1735 to serve the indigent, Charity's social impact derived from its commitment to progressive health care for the poor. In addition to being the second oldest continuing public hospital in the United States, Charity was the second largest hospital in the nation until it was closed in September 2005.

For Press inquiries: http://press.nationaltrust.org/

Staxsun
05-27-2008, 08:18 PM
Very sad!

Kinda curious why you posted this in this forum?

rosetree
05-27-2008, 08:34 PM
$4.5 million to keep Charity's lights and AC on since the storm...just letting you know,everyone left and the last person forgot to turn off the lights:eek: :mad:

http://www.wwltv.com/video/?z=y&nvid=244632

funkkjunkie
05-27-2008, 08:58 PM
Aw, another one is biting the dust. I will be interested to see what the independent study and the locals have to say.
And it's that same ole, same ole, stax. When it's not about fest or music, there's not a clear choice. We NEED a lagniappe forum for everything that doesn't fit anywhere else. Like scrabble and birthdays and, and , and well, yall know.

sophisticated sissy
05-27-2008, 09:04 PM
Very sad!

Kinda curious why you posted this in this forum?

I'm not sure I understand your question?

Staxsun
05-27-2008, 09:15 PM
I'm not sure I understand your question?

I certainly understand why you posted this. What I didn't get is why you posted it in the General Music Discussion Forum. As Funkvikkitti says, it's hard to decide where to post things. The middle two forums are virtually useless. We definitely need a lagniappe forum where things of importance or interest can be posted.

sophisticated sissy
05-27-2008, 09:20 PM
$4.5 million to keep Charity's lights and AC on since the storm...just letting you know,everyone left and the last person forgot to turn off the lights:eek: :mad:

http://www.wwltv.com/video/?z=y&nvid=244632

Whoa! That's a lot KWH and water usage! Wonder what the bills looked like pre-thing?

Let's hope F.E.M.A. completes their assessment soon and that an agreement between them and L.S.U. can be hammered out soon.

T.Y. for the link, Rosie.


(back to you, Dan ...)

sophisticated sissy
05-27-2008, 09:24 PM
:) I certainly understand why you posted this. What I didn't get is why you posted it in the General Music Discussion Forum. As Funkvikkitti says, it's hard to decide where to post things. The middle two forums are virtually useless. We definitely need a lagniappe forum where things of importance or interest can be posted.

I know. I just didn't know if it should be posted here or elsewhere, even though this topic is not about "general music".:confused:


WWSD?

Staxsun
05-27-2008, 09:32 PM
:)

I know. I just didn't know if it should be posted here or elsewhere, even though this topic is not about "general music".:confused:


WWSD?

It's a tough call. I probably would have gone to the JazzFest Forum with all the other stuff that doesn't belong there. Lots of the stuff there should be in this forum, and a few things, like Scrabble, don't belong here. I think that maybe Jazz Fest Moments could become a sticky on the first forum, and then the forum could be changed to Lagniappe. That would still leave a forum where newbies with questions would have their posts up there for all to see and answer. I guess the reason I get protective about this forum is that it comes closer to actually having the threads match the forum than any of the others.

sophisticated sissy
05-27-2008, 09:48 PM
I guess the reason I get protective about this forum is that it comes closer to actually having the threads match the forum than a Blue Dog.


Yes, I see your point.

Staxsun
05-28-2008, 11:04 AM
Speaking of Blue Dogs, when are you going to come back and visit us???? Lots to see, do, and hear here.

sophisticated sissy
05-28-2008, 04:45 PM
There is, Stax! And you know I love Memphis. Haven't been back since I passed through on my way home from Pinetop's Homecoming in Oct. '07.

I want to spend a little more time at your museum where the B.D. exhibit was held. It was fun meeting you there and grabbing a bite to eat afterward.

I really enjoyed driving the "scenic route" you told me about to get back downtown. It was a nice drive and I even remember the tricky part you told me about involving the viaduct. :)

I'll be sure to let you know in advance if any summer travel plans will be routed thru Memphis. It is a magnificent city. Even my older brother, who is not a "city person", loves it!