St. Joseph Hospital showed off its new, three-story, 100,000-square-foot Northeast Tower today, a sleek, spacious, modern space decked in the latest medical equipement, soft colors schemes and muted light — except for the operating rooms, of course. In one of them, under the bright bright light, an excited nurse demonstrated the ease with which the many-armed contraption in its center could be manipulated to bring whatever you need within reach.
Work stations and lobbies, with droplet ceiling lights and softly glowing counter features, feel like tasteful coffeehouse lounges. The requisite comforting nature scenes adorn the walls in waiting rooms and halls (autumnal pastorals for the consultation rooms) and the ceilings where patients will be awake and staring upward.
In the cardiac operating room, a beaming older man told a tour-guide nurse that he was the first patient in the original wing of the hospital, back when it opened in 1954. “Tonsilectomy.”
St. Joe’s built the new tower, which will open for patient care in April, to meet new seismic standards. It cost $145 million to build and equip — paid for, says a flier, with loans, net income, reserves, donations and a dollar-for-dollar match by St. Joseph Health System for the first $12.5 million raised.
The stats: 17 pre-op beds; 10 post-anaesthesia care unit beds; eight operating rooms and a catheterization lab; 12 ICU beds; 40 progressive care unit beds; a sterile processing room (its features and functions enthusiastically described by an employee on the tour); X-ray, Ultrasound and CT units and a 20-bed emergency room.
More pics:
Photos by Ken Malcomson.
This article appears in New Direction.







Let’s keeping making fun of the Sisters, eh Humboldt?
Wikipedia defines a tower as: “…a tall structure, usually taller than it is wide, often by a significant margin.”
I’m still not seeing Saint Joe’s “tower.”
Who’s making fun of the Sisters here, firesidechet?
I only hope this new tower does not signal the onset of increased costs of health care at St. Joes. Some of us still do not have insurance…
Sorry Alley, but this new tower will do nothing to alleviate the crushing costs of medical care for the uninsured as well as the underinsured (and who isn’t underinsured)?
“Do not resuscitate” may end up being a financial blessing for our survivors. God bless the free market.
@Buzz, “God Bless the Free Market”…..yeah, that’s probably what jesus would be doing, taking care of the free market. How sad!
The following FYI is not a defense of St. Joe’s. It is merely information for those sick or injured people who might perhaps disastrously decide to skip a trip to the hospital because they can’t pay: St. Joe’s will treat you whether you can pay or not. And, it has a patient assistance program. It’s for you. Read about it here:
http://www.stjosepheureka.org/PatientsAndVisitors/patientsvisitors/PatientFinancialbrochENG.pdf