Humber River Hospital
Humber River Hospital | |
---|---|
Geography | |
Location | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Organization | |
Care system | Public Medicare (Canada) |
Type | District General |
Affiliated university | University of Toronto Queen's University |
Services | |
Emergency department | Yes |
Beds | 600 |
History | |
Opened | 1997 |
Links | |
Website | http://www.hrh.ca/ |
Lists | Hospitals in Canada |
Humber River Hospital is a large urban hospital in northwest Toronto, Ontario. In 1998 the Ontario Ministry of Health Hospital Restructuring Commission recommended that hospitals merge across the province. The "new" hospital was created by amalgamating three separate hospitals in the former cities of York and North York, and included York-Finch Hospital, Northwestern Hospital, and the Humber Memorial Hospital. The hospitals were renamed according to their location and were referred to as the Finch, Keele and Church sites, respectively.
In 2011, the hospital broke ground on a new $1.75 billion facility near the intersection of Keele and Highway 401 (Wilson Site) which opened on October 18, 2015. This new facility led to the closure of the Finch and Church sites and is "North America's first fully digital hospital".[1]
- Wilson Site (43°43′29″N 79°29′28″W / 43.72472°N 79.49111°W)
Former Sites
- Church Site (43°42′34″N 79°30′36″W / 43.70944°N 79.51000°W) — formerly Humber Memorial Hospital
- Keele Site (43°41′51″N 79°28′27″W / 43.69750°N 79.47417°W) — formerly Northwestern Hospital.
Notable births at Humber hospitals
- George Smitherman, politician and broadcaster, born at Humber Memorial (Church site) on February 12, 1964.