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Jeanne Kisacky

Author, Historian

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Philadelphia Contagious Disease Hospital, 1909

October 26, 2021 By Jeanne Kisacky

The unusual design of the Observation Ward of the Philadelphia Contagious Disease Hospital balanced the competing demands of airborne and contact prevention. The small cubiclesRead More

A Golden Age of US Contagious Facility Designs, 1880s-1920s.

October 26, 2021 By Jeanne Kisacky

After taking a long break from regular blog posts to deal with life issues, over the next weeks I will be posting examples of isolationRead More

Babies’ Hospital, Philadelphia, 1922. A vertical treatment ‘factory’

February 7, 2018 By Jeanne Kisacky

The Babies’ Hospital in Philadelphia, designed by Carl A. Ziegler, was a small specialized hospital that maximized vertical circulation as a means of facilitating theRead More

Emergency Treatment Facility in the Late Nineteenth Century

October 20, 2017 By Jeanne Kisacky

This plan for an ideal Emergency Hospital published by architect George F. Hammond in 1891, provides an interesting catalog of new and old requirements forRead More

U.S. General Hospital, Hilton Head, S.C., 1861.

September 18, 2017 By Jeanne Kisacky

While the majority of hospitals built in the U.S. between the 1860s and 1880s followed (at least to some degree) the pavilion-plan model of separateRead More

A Fireproof Hospital in 1893; the Mary HitchCock Memorial Hospital, Dartmouth, New Hampshire.

September 11, 2017 By Jeanne Kisacky

  Even though hospitals remained low-rise structures well into the twentieth century, given the vulnerable condition of the bedridden patients a fire in a hospitalRead More

Fresh Air Access in the Modern City: 1910 Harlem Hospital vs. the neighborhood children

September 5, 2017 By Jeanne Kisacky

While providing open space on an urban site was difficult and expensive, some hospital designers did manage to leave unbuilt space on their sites, usuallyRead More

Fresh Air Access in the Modern City: The 1894 PostGraduate Hospital and the Spite Wall

August 31, 2017 By Jeanne Kisacky

Hospital building committees that could not afford waterfront sites or sites adjacent to parks; often took the risky chance of relying on existing adjacent low-riseRead More

Fresh Air Access in the Modern City: The 1912 New York Hospital that was never built

August 27, 2017 By Jeanne Kisacky

In the 1910s, the governors of the New York Hospital spent a fortune to acquire a complete city block in the upper West Side betweenRead More

Fresh Air Access in the Modern City

August 27, 2017 By Jeanne Kisacky

Well into the twentieth century, most American hospital designers and builders believed that open space around hospital buildings was a necessity because it allowed directRead More

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