place

Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital

Hospitals established in 1891Hospitals in MichiganRehabilitation hospitals
Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital logo
Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital logo

Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital is a 167-bed acute care inpatient rehabilitation hospital for children and adults who have experienced a brain injury, spinal cord injury, stroke, amputation, or other injury or illness requiring physical rehabilitation.Located in Grand Rapids, Michigan, the not-for-profit hospital expanded from 80 beds to 167 beds in early 2015. Patients come from throughout the Midwest and beyond to recover movement and function through Mary Free Bed's inpatient rehabilitation programs.In 2014, Mary Free Bed and the Michigan State University College of Human Medicine created a partnership to expand Mary Free Bed into a teaching and research hospital. The John F. Butzer Center for Research & Innovation is led by John F. Butzer, MD, who served as Mary Free Bed's chief medical officer for 29 years. MSUCHM also launched the Division of Rehabilitation Medicine in 2014 and named Dr. Butzer as director.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital
Jefferson Avenue Southeast, Grand Rapids

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Phone number Website Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation HospitalContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.955965 ° E -85.662799 °
placeShow on map

Address

Mercy Health Saint Mary's

Jefferson Avenue Southeast 200
49503 Grand Rapids
Michigan, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Phone number
Trinity Health

call+16166855000

Website
mercyhealthsaintmarys.com

linkVisit website

Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital logo
Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital logo
Share experience

Nearby Places

Abram W. Pike House
Abram W. Pike House

At 172-years-old, the Pike House is one of Michigan's historical treasures. Built in 1844, it is one of the oldest homes still standing in Michigan and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The name, the Pike House, comes from the original occupier, Abram W. Pike. Abram Pike, a fur trader, came to Michigan in 1827. Pike lived in Port Sheldon on Lake Michigan, at the mouth of the Pigeon River, and was employed as the company clerk for the Port Sheldon Land Company.At the time, there were hopes that Port Sheldon would become a major metropolis. Though this vision was never fully realized, the Ottawa House Hotel was completed before the project's eventual financial ruin. The Ottawa House Hotel was only open for five years but was recognized as one of the most impressive buildings in Port Sheldon. When Abram Pike relocated to Grand Rapids in 1844 he had four of the six pillars from the grandiose Ottawa House Hotel drug by ox and attached to the front of his home, which now stands—unmistakably—at 230 E. Fulton St. The house was occupied as a family residence until 1922. In 1922, it was turned into the Grand Rapids Art Gallery—now the Grand Rapids Art Museum—and remained so until the museum moved in 1978. In 2014, amidst building renovations, workers uncovered an original “Grand Rapids Art Museum” sign, painted in large, bold letters atop the entryway to the Pike House.In 2014 the Pike House was purchased by Grand Rapids bankruptcy law firm, Keller & Almassian, PLC, which remains in the property today.