The California Institute of Technology has announced it will buy St. Luke
Medical Center in
northeast Pasadena, which closed last year, and use the space for research.
The hospital, opened in 1933 by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange, will
be used for work in
fields such as astronomy that requires space the main campus struggles
to provide, said Al
Horvath, Caltech's vice president for business and finance.
Neither Caltech nor the seller, Tenet Healthcare Corp., would disclose
details of the sale, but
officials said they expect it to be finalized in late June.
Tenet, the second-largest, for-profit hospital operator in the country,
acquired the property in
1997 but closed it last April because of the hospital's financial troubles,
the difficulty of
retrofitting the historic structure with modern hospital technology and
competition from nearby
medical facilities.
Some residents opposed the closure because it left Pasadena with fewer
options for emergency
care. But St. Luke officials and others argued there were five more hospitals
within an eight-mile
radius.
Tenet officials said they searched for a buyer that would preserve the
architectural integrity of
the buildings.
The main building, with its Spanish-style dome, and two smaller structures
once used as a chapel
and convent, have been designated historic buildings by the city of Pasadena,
Horvath said. The
grounds have manicured lawns, terrazzo floors and elaborate stairways.
"We would not be able to take those buildings down or change the
exterior," Horvath said.
"When we first started looking at the property, they basically told
us, 'The main hospital building
is going to be historic, so you need to think about that.' "
The first team of researchers will move into the building within six months
to a year, he said.
|