place

Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center

1923 establishments in LouisianaBuildings and structures in Baton Rouge, LouisianaCatholic health careCatholic hospitals in North AmericaFranciscan hospitals
Hospital buildings completed in 1978Hospitals established in 1923Hospitals in LouisianaTeaching hospitals in LouisianaTrauma centers

Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center (OLOLRMC) is a general medical and surgical facility located in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. It is a Catholic hospital member of the Franciscan Missionaries of Our Lady Health System (FMOLHS). The hospital is accredited by the Joint Commission, and it serves as a teaching hospital to Our Lady of the Lake College, Louisiana State University, Tulane University, and Southern University. OLOLRMC is the dominant institution in healthcare in the Greater Baton Rouge area and the largest private medical center in Louisiana, with over 1,020 beds. In a given year, OLOLRMC treats approximately 25,000 patients in the hospital, and services about 350,000 persons through outpatient locations. It has a complement of almost 900 physicians and 3,000 staff members. The Lake also operates two nursing homes, has an affiliated cancer facility adjacent to the main hospital, and operates a number of outpatient services on its campus as well as in outlying locations.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center
Hennessy Boulevard, Baton Rouge

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

Wikipedia: Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical CenterContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 30.403888888889 ° E -91.106944444444 °
placeShow on map

Address

Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center

Hennessy Boulevard 7777
70808 Baton Rouge
Louisiana, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Phone number
Franciscan Missionaries of Our Lady Health System

call+12257656565

Website
ololrmc.com

linkVisit website

linkWikiData (Q7111020)
linkOpenStreetMap (489846285)

Share experience

Nearby Places

LSU Rural Life Museum

The LSU Rural Life Museum is а museum of Louisiana history in Baton Rouge, US. It is located in the Burden Museum and Gardens, a 400-acre (1,600,000 m2) agricultural research experiment station, and is operated under the aegis of Louisiana State University. As a state with a diverse cultural ancestry, Louisiana has natives of French, Spanish, Native American, German, African, Acadian, and Anglo American heritage. Guided tours are available for groups of ten or more and must be booked in advance. The Rural Life Museum commemorates the contributions made by its various cultural groups through interpretive programs and events throughout the year. The main portion of the museum is outdoors and consists of homes and outbuildings built in the 18th and 19th centuries. This portion of the museum is divided into three areas. The Working Plantation illustrates the life of working people on a 19th-century plantation, with a main focus on the lives of enslaved persons. The complex buildings include a commissary, overseer's house, kitchen, slave cabins, sick house, schoolhouse, blacksmith shop, sugar house, church, and grist mill. The Southern part of the outdoor museum includes several cabins and outbuildings, including the Neal home, a dogtrot house; the Stoker barn; the Stoner Athens Cabin; and a pioneer cabin originally located in Washington Parish. This section highlights the contributions of mainly American settlers to Louisiana in the northern and central part of the state in the 19th century. The Acadian or Cajun portion of the outdoor museums consists of two Acadian style homes, one a replica and the other built by the Bergeron family between 1800 and 1815 on Bayou Lafourche and moved to the museum in 2005.Additionally, the Barn, an interior warehouse open to the public, houses numerous artifacts from the 19th and early 20th centuries that were utilized in the common life rituals of individuals in rural regions of the state. There is a large collection of farming equipment, tools, furnishings and utensils. The barn was moved to its present site from the Stoker House property in Sabine Parish, Louisiana after it was donated in 1999. Windrush gardens and a gift shop are on the grounds and open year-round except for major holidays.