Monday, January 9, 2023

Room with a waterside view: Fort Lauderdale Beach Hospital

Fort Lauderdale Beach Hospital
circa 1960






By Jane Feehan

“Come by boat or canoe,” read an unconventional invitation to opening festivities at Fort Lauderdale Beach Hospital in July 1957. The hospital was organized in 1956 to serve older patients as well as “the chronically ill and the handicapped.”

The 64-bed, four-story facility was once the Blue Water Hotel. Some who were cared for at the hospital probably felt they were at a vacation spot. It overlooked the Intracoastal Waterway, offered an outdoor patio with covering, dockage and other amenities. Headed by Dr. Louis Amato, the waterside hospital opened with elevators, laboratory and X-ray facilities and equipment for physical therapy. According to Amato, Fort Lauderdale Beach Hospital would operate as a supplement to others in the area, not as a surgery center. Surging growth in Fort Lauderdale’s population, particularly retired residents, elevated the area’s need for additional hospital beds.   

In 1964 the Katie Lambert* Foundation purchased Fort Lauderdale Beach Hospital. It was operated by Beach Hospital Auxiliary as a nonprofit, community-supported entity. The organization added about 20 beds, expanded radiology and lab capabilities and built a new entrance and emergency room. Renovations were drawn up by William H. Crawford, tapped “Architect of the Year” by the American Hospital Association.

Meanwhile, Fort Lauderdale’s population continued to grow. So did its medical community. Doctors with diverse ambitions—and politics—eventually led Fort Lauderdale Hospital in a different direction. In 1969 plans to move the hospital to a new beach location materialized. The hospital transitioned to operate as the North Beach Hospital at 2835 N. Ocean Boulevard (A1A) and opened in 1973. 

Cleveland Clinic was granted permission to operate an outpatient clinic at North Beach in 1988, which paved the way for their expansion to a permanent full-scale facilty in Weston.

By the late 1980s Broward County had nearly twice as many hospital beds as needed. Hospitals entered a paradigm that continues today across the country: national corporations buying up hospitals to create hospital “systems.” So byzantine are hospital stories today with their buyouts and consolidations, etc., that their histories are best presented as tables of chronologies rather than narratives. 

North Beach closed by the mid-to late 1990s and today it’s the site of a condominium or two with an ocean and Intracoastal view. A drive past the original site at 125 Birch Road will reveal another occupant: Springbrook Gardens … a condominium.

 *Katie Lambert was a beloved auxiliary volunteer

Sources:

Fort Lauderdale News, Sept. 5, 1956

Fort Lauderdale News, July 24, 1957

Fort Lauderdale News, Dec. 13, 1964

Fort Lauderdale News, April 9, 1969

Sun-Sentinel, Oct. 9, 1970

Sun-Sentinel Jan. 9, 1989

Sun-Sentinel, April 27, 1989

Sun-Sentinel, Feb. 14, 1990

Sun-Sentinel, Sept. 21, 1995

Sun-Sentinel, Dec. 20, 1997


Tags: Fort Lauderdale history, history of Fort Lauderdale, Fort Lauderdale hospitals, Fort Lauderdale Beach Hospital, North Beach Hospital, architects, Jane Feehan