Baycrest

Baycrest
Geography
Location Bathurst Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Organization
Care system Public Medicare (Canada) (OHIP)
Hospital type Specialist
Affiliated university University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine
Services
Emergency department No
Beds 472 nursing home
300 continuing & acute care
Speciality Elderly care
History
Founded 1918
Links
Website www.baycrest.org
Lists Hospitals in Canada

Baycrest is a research and education hospital on Bathurst Street in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

It was founded in 1918 as the Toronto Jewish Old Folks Home in a semi-detached Victorian house at 29 Cecil Street in downtown Toronto and later neighbouring homes from the 1920s to 1930s (now .[1] The New Jewish Home for the Aged moved up on Bathurst Street in 1954 and again in 1968, the new Jewish Home for the Aged opened at Baycrest's present location in North York and Baycrest Hospital was also built as a geriatric facility occupying the 2nd home for the aged.[2] The entire Bathurst complex became known collectively as Baycrest.

The old Jewish Home for the Aged (at 29, 31 and 33) Cecil Street was demolished in 1954 and is now home to the United Steelworkers Larry Sefton Hall (c. 1972 at 25 Cecil Street) and Toronto Labour Lyceum (c. 1971 33 Cecil Street).[3]

While Baycrest serves all of the elderly, it was originally founded by and for the Jewish community and thus caters specifically to the needs of the Jewish elderly, including those of Holocaust survivors. Baycrest's facilities include a full-service hospital, the Jewish Home for the Aged nursing home, the Baycrest Terrace Assisted Living facility, and a research facility affiliated with the University of Toronto.

Passages of Life (1987), by Canadian sculptor Anne Harris, in front of Baycrest

Coordinates: 43°43′48″N 79°25′59″W / 43.730°N 79.433°W / 43.730; -79.433

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 17, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.