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History

NYC Health + Hospitals/South Brooklyn Health originated in 1875 as an emergency first-aid station located on the oceanfront beach near West Third Street. The cases consisted chiefly of lacerations of the feet caused by broken bottles. On May 12, 1902, a small, one and ½-story wooden building located on Sea Breeze Avenue was rented to serve as an emergency hospital during the summer months. Generally referred to as Sea Breeze Hospital, it was officially known as Reception Hospital, and was actually an annex of Kings County Hospital. This unit had accommodations for 20 beds and facilities for emergency treatment. Patients requiring surgery or prolonged treatment and care were taken by horse-drawn ambulance to Kings County Hospital, about seven miles away.

With the rapid population growth in the southern part of Brooklyn, the need for a large and permanent hospital in the area became apparent. In 1908, construction of a 100-bed hospital was started on land purchased just north of Coney Island Creek and east of Ocean Parkway. On May 18, 1910, dedication ceremonies were held. NYC Health + Hospitals/South Brooklyn Health consisted of six buildings: the Main Hospital Building, Nurses Home, Employees Dormitory, Laboratory Building, Power Plant, and Laundry Building. The shore-front community experienced a population explosion as veterans returned from World War II, so the two white brick towers that make up the current hospital were opened in 1954. In spring 2006, NYC Health + Hospitals/South Brooklyn Health opened a new inpatient bed tower to provide care to its ever-changing, ever-growing community.

Southern Brooklyn has long been a Mecca to new immigrants. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries it was ethnic Jews, Irish, and Italians who settled here. In the ’50s and ’60s, African-Americans migrated from the South to live and work in New York City. Many settled in Coney Island where there was newly constructed affordable housing. From the late 1970s through the early 1990s, Brighton Beach became known as “Little Odessa” because it became the home of refugees fleeing religious and political persecution in the former Soviet Union. In the last 10 years, immigrants from many parts of the world have made southern Brooklyn their home as they sought a better life for themselves and their children. During its years of service, NYC Health + Hospitals/South Brooklyn Health has established its reputation for clinical excellence and culturally competent care. The hospital’s staff is as diverse as the patients they serve. Interpreter services can be provided at any time of the day or night in over 130 languages.

People from all over the world have not only found a home in southern Brooklyn but they have chosen to make their medical home at NYC Health + Hospitals/South Brooklyn Health.

A Timeline of great South Brooklyn Health Care

1875
Coney Island Hospital started as a first aid station for summer beachgoers
1908
Coney Island Hospital opens as a 100-bed hospital
1954
Main building constructed
2005
Tower building completed to expand inpatient services
2012
Hospital temporarily closes due to damage from Superstorm Sandy
2014
FEMA awards NYC Health + Hospitals $900M to build a new storm resilient hospital
2020
Coney Island Hospital becomes a New York State certified percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) Center
2021
The hospital named an Advanced Primary Stroke Center
2021
Ginsburg family joins hospital staff for renaming event.
Summer 2022
Hospital begins offering robotic surgery
Fall 2022
The new South Brooklyn Health Campus and Ruth Bader Ginsburg Hospital will open for care