New York Cancer Hospital
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455 Central Park West as it stands today[1], first built between 1884 and 1886 as the New York Cancer Hospital,
now converted to luxury condominiums
The New
York Cancer Hospital (NYCH) in New
York City was a cancer
treatment and research institution founded in 1884 .
The hospital was located at 455 Central Park West between 105th St and 106th
St. Built between 1884 through 1890, it was marveled as the first hospital in
the United States dedicated specifically for the treatment of cancer.
Beginning
In the summer of 1884, former
President Ulysses S. Grant developed throat cancer. He lived
in a brownstone at 3 East 66th
Street, and his ensuing decline caught the
attention of the nation. Considered incurable, as well as contagious and
shameful, Grant’s death the following year brought awareness of the disease.
Although his cancer was inoperable, others were more fortunate, since the
development of anesthesia in the mid-19th century had finally given
doctors a surgical treatment for cancer.
In the year of Grant's diagnosis,
John Jacob Astor III, Thomas A. Emmet, Joseph
W. Drexel and other prominent New Yorkers laid the cornerstone for the New York
Cancer Hospital, the country's first to devote itself exclusively to the care
of cancer patients. Designed by Charles
C. Haight and completed in 1887, the first
portion of the hospital, designated solely for women, was at the southwest
corner of 106th and Central Park West. At the dedication, Grant's physician,
Fordyce Barker, said that cancer was not due to misery, to poverty, or bad
sanitary surroundings, or to ignorance or to bad habits, but a disease
afflicting the cultured, the wealthy and the inhabitants of salubrious
localities.
In 1890 the hospital was expanded
south, and in both sections Haight designed circular
wards, about 40 feet in diameter, in part to facilitate better observation by a
nurse at a central desk and in part because the design offered more space
between the heads of the beds. Ventilation was a key concern, so a duct ran up
the centers of the wards to remove what was said to be intense odors
caused by the disease. Haight worked the round wards
into the exterior architecture, which he executed in deep red brick and soft
brown Belleville
brownstone,
with great conical towers irregularly placed on the three fronts.
The big, broad towers gave the
hospital the character of a French châteaux,
like the Château de Chambord at Chambord, Loir-et-Cher,
France, and made
it one of the most important pieces of institutional architecture in New York
even till today. It is widely said it would much more readily be taken for
an art
museum than for a hospital.
Medical Innovation
During the hospitals inauguration,
treatment for cancer was mostly palliative.
The hospital offered what was considered the best treatments available for that
time. Cancer treatment then meant, at best, easing pain and making the sufferer
as comfortable as possible. Many patients came to the New York Cancer
Hospital, in effect, to
die, assuaged by morphine. Other forms of relief included carriage rides in Central
Park and Sunday services in the hospital's Chapel of St. Elizabeth of Hungary, patron saint of the
suffering.
From its beginnings, the NYCH
seemed fraught with misfortune. Just months after laying the cornerstone to the
new hospital, one of its primary benefactors, Elizabeth Hamilton Cullum, succumbed to uterine cancer. In an ironic twist of
faith, John Jacob Astor’s wife, Charlotte Augusta Astor also died of uterine
cancer just a week shy after the hospitals grand opening in December 1887,
missing her chance to be presumably cured. Due in part to his generous
financial contributions to the facility, the New York Cancer Hospital’s
first wing was appropriately dedicated the “Astor Pavilion”.
Inspired as much by modern
medical theory as by 16th-century French châteaux, the architect Charles Haight's round towers were designed to deter germs and dirt
from accumulating in sharp corners, which at the time was considered a
harboring ground for disease. An air shaft ran vertically through the center of
each tower to prevent air from stagnating in the wards. This design was
considered the very latest in 19th-century ventilation technology: The New York
Times commented in 1888 that "altogether, the[se]
features marked a new departure in hospital construction and make this
admirable structure a model of its kind."
The 20th century brought new
techniques in cancer treatment, including radiation
therapy. In 1921, Marie Curie visited the New
York Cancer Hospital, by then renamed the General Memorial
Hospital for the
Treatment of Cancer and Allied Diseases, to see the brick and steel vault where
the hospital kept its four grams of radium -- at the
time the largest accumulation in the world. Dr. Edward H. Rogers, who was
escorting her, assured The Times that there is no case on record of anyone
being injured in health by radium. He denied that Curie had been harmed by
the radioactive
material, saying she had been ill recently only from anemia. In this
period the hazards of radium were beginning to emerge, sparking defensive
claims by its proponents. She died in 1934, ironically due to radium poisoning.
In retrospect, early radiation treatments were often worse than the disease
they were meant to cure. Radiation caused severe burns and, in some cases,
additional cancers. New York
Cancer Hospital
may have been hailed a success for its good intentions, but there was no end to
the suffering of those within. Plagued by the growing death rate, the NYCH had
its own crematorium
located in the basement
of the facility. All the more dreadful by the vision, through
its gothic windows, of the tall smokestack
to the west of the main building.
History
Largely because cancer remained
so deadly, the hospital soon ran into financial troubles. It came to be known
as "the Bastille," a place to be feared and avoided by patients and
patrons. At the turn of the century, administrators of the beleaguered hospital
changed its name to the General Memorial Hospital,
and again in the early 1920’s to the General
Memorial Hospital
for the Treatment of Cancer and Allied Diseases. Through the decades, the
hospital endured its arduous dedication for its principle grounds of finding a
cure for cancer.
In 1955, the General Memorial
Hospital for the Treatment of Cancer
and Allied Diseases moved out of the outdated Central Park West facility to its
new location on the East Side. There it grew
to become what is present day Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center. It was during this time that the former New York Cancer
Hospital building began
its decline. Under the new ownership of nursing home magnate Bernard
Bergman, it was turned into a facility called Towers Nursing Home. The
nursing home later became infamous for its negligence and lack of standards.
The elderly patients testified to "atrocious conditions," including
inadequate heat, pest infestations, physical abuse and negligence. The patients
weren’t the only ones being neglected either. The old facilities were un-kept,
filthy, and a "pungent odor" filled the air. The once immaculate building, became a sad derelict place. It was not soon there
after that a state and federal investigation ensued, following a probe into
allegations of Medicaid and Tax fraud that ultimately caused the home to close
its doors in 1974.[2] The former New York Cancer Hospital was left in such a
disastrous condition following the closure of the nursing home that there were
talks of demolition
before the New York City Landmarks
Preservation Commission designated the hospital building a historic landmark in
1976.


Former building
New Beginning
The beautiful medical hospital,
once a marvel for both architectural allure and medical innovation, was
succumbing to a slow death of decrepitude. Both nature and vandals took its
toll on the failing facility and its future lay uncertain for many decades. In
the neighborhood the building become popularly known as “the castle” due to its
gothic round towers. The building was condemned to years of neglect, only
frequented by the homeless and vandals.
Through the years, many promising
developers expressed interest in the decaying property. Among some of them were
hotelier and real-estate developer Ian Schrager, best known as part owner of the infamous Studio 54,
whose attempt to renovate the landmark into luxury apartments failed. The old
hospital lay abandoned for nearly 3 decades until March 2000, when a Chicago based developer
MCL Companies gave new hope after all. With high hopes and generous financing,
Daniel E. McLean, president and chief executive of the MCL Companies entered
the picture when he bought the property for $21 million and began construction.
But like numerous predecessors he was forced to halt the work due to financial
holdups following the tragic events of 9/11. McLean envisioned a plan that called for massive
renovation of the old hospital remnant into modern luxury condominiums, that includes a new modern 26 story tower adjacent to the
landmark building. Among the new tenants are Columbia University, who bought several entire
floors to use as residence to house senior faculty and visiting dignitaries.
The purchase by Columbia, as well as a new
construction loan, allowed McLean’s project to
get back on track after work was halted due to lack of money following 9/11.
By early 2005, construction on
the old landmark hospital, now called 455 Central Park
West, had come to a completion. The once abandoned
hospital had finally found a new promising life as luxury condominiums, with
units that sell for as much as $7 million. The new facilities offer luxury
units with cavernous circular rooms, lofty ceilings, and splendid views
overlooking Central Park. Tenants enjoy such
amenities as a spa, indoor pool, and 24 hour concierge service.