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Triboro Hospital for Tuberculosis

1941 establishments in New York CityArt Deco architecture in Queens, New YorkDefunct hospitals in QueensEggers & Higgins buildingsHospitals established in 1941
Hospitals in Queens, New YorkJamaica, QueensJohn Russell Pope buildingsNYC Health + HospitalsNational Register of Historic Places in Queens, New YorkPublic Works Administration in New York (state)Tuberculosis sanatoria in the United StatesUse mdy dates from January 2019
Queens Hospital Center Parsons Blvd jeh
Queens Hospital Center Parsons Blvd jeh

Triboro Hospital for Tuberculosis or Triboro Tuberculosis Hospital, later simply Triboro Hospital and now known as "Building T" or the "T Building", is a former municipal tuberculosis sanatorium and later a general hospital located on the campus of Queens Hospital Center in Jamaica, Queens, New York City. Completed in 1941, it was merged with the adjacent Queens General Hospital to form Queens Hospital Center in the 1950s, and converted into a general hospital by the 1970s. Now primarily used for administrative purposes, several plans have been proposed to reuse the site, or to preserve the building as a historic landmark. On January 31, 2019 the hospital was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Triboro Hospital for Tuberculosis (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Triboro Hospital for Tuberculosis
164th Street, New York Queens

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Wikipedia: Triboro Hospital for TuberculosisContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.717318 ° E -73.80776 °
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Address

Queens Hospital Center (Queens Hospital Center)

164th Street 82-68
11432 New York, Queens
New York, United States
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Phone number
NYC Health + Hospitals

call+17188833000

Website
nychealthandhospitals.org

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linkWikiData (Q38251885)
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Queens Hospital Center Parsons Blvd jeh
Queens Hospital Center Parsons Blvd jeh
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Nearby Places

Playground Seventy Five

Playground Seventy Five is a public park located on 160th Street and 75th Avenue in the Hillcrest neighborhood of Queens, New York. It was acquired by the New York City government in 1929 as part of land condemnations for the construction of Public School 154. The undeveloped section of the block was reserved as a schoolyard and developed as a playground in 1954. The playground was named after 75th Avenue, a historical thoroughfare known as Quarrelsome Lane that dates to the 19th century when the surrounding landscape consisted of farmland. In 1911, Queens Borough President Maurice E. Connolly directed the borough's Topographical Bureau to design a numbered grid system to connect road segments across Queens and eliminate duplicate names. Quarrelsome Lane became 75th Avenue and nearby Black Stump Road, named after the stumps that delineated farm boundaries, became 73rd Avenue.The section of Fresh Meadows surrounding this playground was historically known as Flushing Suburban was developed in the 1920s and experienced an influx of African Americans in the 1950s. In contrast to many other racially changing neighborhoods, Flushing Suburban maintained its diversity throughout the following decades. Following the 1964 expansion of the Public School 154, the remaining portion of the playground was jointly operated by Parks and the Board of Education.Through the efforts of Flushing Suburban Civic Association, residents participated in the civil rights movement by protesting instances of discrimination in Queens while also traveling to the South to promote voter registration. Since 1990, the group organized volunteer cleanups of Playground 75, along with sports programs in partnership with P.S. 154 and other neighborhood schools.