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NYU Emergency Services Re-Open After Superstorm Sandy

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NYU Langone has tripled in size.
NYU Langone has tripled in size.
NYU Langone Medical Center today announced the opening of the new Ronald O. Perelman Center for Emergency Services (Perelman Emergency Center). Located at 570 First Avenue at 33rd street, the 22,000 square-foot facility more than triples the size of the former emergency department (ED), and includes 40 emergency care treatment spaces. In December 2013, NYU Langone’s longtime trustee Ronald O. Perelman, chairman and chief executive officer of MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings Inc., announced a $50 million gift to create the Perelman Emergency Center.

“Since reopening the hospital, returning critical emergency services to New York City has been our top priority, and we are proud to introduce the Ronald O. Perelman Center for Emergency Services,” said Robert I. Grossman, MD, dean and CEO at NYU Langone. “This comfortable, state-of-the-art facility gives patients from the community access to advanced adult and pediatric emergency care.”

This event marks the first time NYU Langone’s ED has been open since the former ED closed for repairs and renovation following damages sustained from Hurricane Sandy in October 2012. The new Perelman Emergency Center maximizes clinical efficiencies and new technologies in emergency medicine. Of note, it includes the KiDS of NYU Pediatric Emergency Care Center, which is a dedicated space designed to meet the specific needs of children and families. Additionally, in response to Hurricane Sandy, NYU Langone built the Perelman Emergency Center with flood mitigation measures that will help protect the facility against future severe storms.

“For more than a year, New York has been rebuilding and reimagining itself for a new weather reality that affects all of us. I toured this site a couple weeks after the storm, and I believe that the work done on NYU Langone’s ED truly demonstrates the resilience and dedication of New Yorkers who come together in times of great crisis and emerge stronger than before,” said New York Governor Andrew Cuomo. “The storm left the entire region severely battered but still, our spirit was strong, and I am happy to stand here today and celebrate the opening of NYU Langone’s Perelman Emergency Center.”

The new Perelman Emergency Center is part of NYU Langone’s sweeping campus transformation designed to modernize its infrastructure to more efficiently and effectively meet the demands of today’s complex health care delivery system. Over 50,000 visits to the Perelman Emergency Center are expected on an annual basis.

“The Perelman Center for Emergency Services will undoubtedly have a long-lasting impact on the community in extraordinary ways, and I am thrilled to be a part of this new chapter,” said Mr. Perelman, who has been deeply involved with NYU Langone for over three decades.

“The physical environment of an emergency department not only affects a patient’s overall experience, but more importantly, his or her ability to recover. For this reason, our faculty and staff have found innovative ways to make the space both clinically efficient, as well as a place of healing to improve outcomes,” said Lewis Goldfrank, MD, the Herbert W. Adams Professor and chair, Department of Emergency Medicine at NYU Langone. “I’ve waited a long time for this exciting day, and I am so proud of the hard work and dedication of everyone who made this possible.”

“From day one, we’ve prioritized recovery and rebuilding for the New York City neighborhoods impacted by Sandy,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “Opening the Perelman Emergency Center is a great accomplishment for NYU Langone, and an even greater resource and comfort for the citizens of New York. I want to thank NYU Langone’s faculty and staff for continuing to provide necessary services to New Yorkers and visitors alike, even after the ED was forced to close.”

“NYU Langone is a critical pillar of New York’s hospital system that must be running on all cylinders for a healthy New York,” said Senator Charles Schumer.  “From day one of the Hurricane Sandy disaster I worked with the hospital and FEMA to get the support needed for NYU Langone to come back better and stronger than ever — and today we have done just that. We are thrilled to restore important emergency care services to the people of New York City.”

NYU Langone extends its gratitude to its many dedicated donors who helped to make this transformation possible, including  KiDS of NYU Langone, and Trudy Elbaum Gottesman and Robert Gottesman, specifically for their generous gift to pediatric emergency care services.

For more information about the Perelman Emergency Center:

Web address: http://emergency.med.nyu.edu

Street address: 570 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016

Telephone: 212.263.5550

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