Facility Design and Construction

Área de elementos

Taxonomía

Código

D005160

Nota(s) sobre el alcance

  • Architecture, exterior and interior design, and construction of facilities other than hospitals, e.g., dental schools, medical schools, ambulatory care clinics, and specified units of health care facilities. The concept also includes architecture, design, and construction of specialized contained, controlled, or closed research environments including those of space labs and stations.

Nota(s) sobre el origen

  • Medical Subject Headings

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    Términos jerárquicos

    Facility Design and Construction

    Término General Architecture

    Facility Design and Construction

    Términos equivalentes

    Facility Design and Construction

    • Usado para Facility Construction
    • Usado para Facility Design

    Términos asociados

    Facility Design and Construction

      37 Descripción archivística results for Facility Design and Construction

      Labor and Delivery/Perinatal Center
      US AA170.F005 · Unidad documental compuesta · 1982
      Parte de Office of the President of the Mount Sinai Hospital, Samuel Davis records

      Memos and State of New York Office of Health Systems Management Application for Hospital Construction forms regarding renovation of the Labor and Delivery Suite in the Klingenstein Pavilion and the development of an integrated Perinatal Center including Labor and Delivery, Neonatal, and Postpartum functions. Application includes summary, capital costs of the project, operating costs, staffing, and building plans.

      US AA153.INT102 · Unidad documental compuesta · 2003-04-30
      Parte de Oral history collection for "Teaching Tomorrow's Medicine Today" book

      This is a recording of the oral history of Robert Lazzarini, PhD conducted by Arthur J. Aufses Jr. on April 30th, 2003. Dr. Lazzarini begins the oral history commenting on his education and training. He then discusses his role at the Brookdale Center for Molecular Biology, including his implementation of common use equipment in the laboratories and the Brookdale Store and the revenue it created for the center, and the absorption of the Brookdale Center into the Biochemistry Department in 1998. Other significant topics in this oral history include: molecular biology and Dr. Lazzarini’s areas of research at the National Institution of Health and at Mount Sinai; the graduate school at Mount Sinai; his work with then Dean Ken Davis on space utilization and reallocation including the designing of the renovation for the Bronx VA lab space; and his thoughts on the future of the Mount Sinai institution.

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