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Central Clinical Hospital of the Medical University in Łódź

Buildings and structures in ŁódźHospitals in PolandMedical University of Łódź

The Central Clinical Hospital of the Medical University in Łódź is affiliated to the Medical University of Łódź. The building is on Sporna Street in Łódź. It was established in 1997 and given its present name in 2015. It provides specialized dental services, round-the-clock and outpatient psychiatric care for adults and adolescents, Nuclear medicine, Preventive Medicine, Sports medicine, Cardiac Rehabilitation, Metabolic Diseases, Immunology, Allergology, Neurology and Genetics. It also performs hospital care, with 186 inpatient beds and 56 outpatient beds in the psychiatric departments. It includes the Central Teaching Hospital Institute of Dentistry which was created in 2012. The Maria Konopnicka Paediatric Centre has 19 departments (surgical and nonsurgical) with 260 inpatients and 6 outpatient beds. It was awarded 51,620,000 Polish złoty for the second stage of the construction of the Clinical and Didactic Center of the Medical University of Lodz together with the Academic Oncology Center in 2019. Monika Domarecka is the director of the hospital.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Central Clinical Hospital of the Medical University in Łódź (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Central Clinical Hospital of the Medical University in Łódź
Czechosłowacka, Łódź

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N 51.7727 ° E 19.5089 °
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Centralny Szpital Kliniczny

Czechosłowacka
92-219 Łódź (Łódź-Widzew)
Łódź Voivodeship, Poland
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Jewish Cemetery, Łódź
Jewish Cemetery, Łódź

The Łódź Jewish Cemetery, also known as the New Jewish Cemetery, was once the largest Jewish cemetery in Poland and one of the largest in the world. Located in the city of Łódź on Bracka Street, the necropolis was opened in 1892 and occupies around 44 hectares of land. The cemetery contains from 180,000 to 230,000 marked graves, as well as mass graves of victims of the Litzmannstadt Ghetto and the Holocaust. From 1893 to 1896, the basic construction of the necropolis was completed under the supervision of well-known architect Adolf Zeligson.The circular access is provided by the gate from the southern side on the axis of Abram Cukier Street, which is an extension Chryzantem Street. Pedestrian access is possible from the east through a gate in the wall stretching along Zmienna Street. The composition of the foundation is based on the arrangement of two mutually perpendicular axes. The first one leads from the main gate to the square in front of the pre-funeral house. Alongside it, there were once buildings associated with the functioning of the necropolis, in addition to the pre-burial house, this complex included a synagogue, a residential house for cemetery service, a water tower, a mikveh and other minor construction facilities. Today over a hundred of historical gravesites have been declared historical monuments and are in various stages of restoration. The mausoleum of Izrael Poznański is perhaps the largest Jewish tombstone in the world and the only one containing decorative mosaic. The cemetery continues to function as a Jewish burial site.