Building the Ronald O. Perelman Center for Emergency Services
The Ronald O. Perelman Center for Emergency Services, also known as the Perelman Emergency Center, opened in April 2014. Located at 570 First Avenue at 33rd Street, the 22,000-square-foot facility more than triples the size of the former emergency department. It is equipped with 40 treatment spaces, including 3 triage rooms, 3 resuscitation rooms, and 3 negative-pressure isolation rooms. An on-site pharmacist is on duty 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, and there are separate entrances for ambulance and walk-in patients.
In December 2013, ºÙºÙÊÓƵ’s longtime trustee Ronald O. Perelman, chairman and chief executive officer of MacAndrews and Forbes Holdings Inc., announced a $50-million gift to create the Perelman Emergency Center. ºÙºÙÊÓƵ built the facility with flood mitigation measures that will help protect the facility against severe storms.
Plans for a new, larger, and more modern emergency room began years before the impact of Superstorm Sandy forced the existing emergency room to close, but the closing afforded us the opportunity to accelerate construction of the new facility, and the Perelman Emergency Center opened 18 months after Superstorm Sandy hit.
The Perelman Emergency Center maximizes clinical efficiencies and new technologies in emergency medicine. Its main features include:
- spacious treatment rooms and bedside registration
- state-of-the-art imaging facilities for quick testing and diagnosis
- efficient intake and discharge processes to make treatment areas available sooner for incoming patients
- new KiDS Emergency Department, which provides a child-focused and family-centered environment
- expedited service for less urgent, non-acute patients
- direct access to ºÙºÙÊÓƵ’s Comprehensive Stroke Center, a nationally recognized program
The Perelman Emergency Center was designed to be flexible and scalable so that its space can be adapted to fluctuations in patient volume. Since opening, it has already been enhanced with the addition of five patient treatment bays in December 2017, and another two treatment bays in June 2018.