Los Angeles Times

County plans to convert hospital into housing

Redevelopm­ent could lead to 371 affordable units

- By Summer Lin

Los Angeles County officials are moving forward with a plan to convert the mostly vacant General Hospital building, on the site of L.A. CountyUSC Medical Center, into affordable housing units.

The Board of Supervisor­s approved a motion Tuesday to begin creating constructi­on and financial plans for the project. The motion directs county department­s to report back within four months on a potential timeline and allocate up to $194.7 million in funding for the project, according to a news release from Supervisor Hilda Solis.

“Cementing our commitment to its restoratio­n and reuse can aid in our response to the housing crisis our region is experienci­ng, as well as provide exceptiona­l health services — carrying on the hospital’s over 150-year-old mission,” said Solis, who introduced

motion.

The General Hospital project is part of the Restorativ­e Care Village proposal, a county effort that began in 2017 with the goal of combining resources for homelessne­ss, unemployme­nt, mental health and substance abuse on the County-USC campus. Under the proposal, General Hospital could be overhauled to include 184 market-rate units and 371 affordable units.

A spokespers­on for Solis’ office said the project will help provide residentia­l treatment and services for housing-insecure people who may need a place to recover after receiving medical care.

The Restorativ­e Care Village project has three phases. Phase 1 was recently completed with the 96-bed Recuperati­ve Care Center, which will offer interim supportive housing for some people released from L.A. County health facilities, and the 64-bed Residentia­l Treatment Programs, which will provide intensive treatment for patients discharged from psychiatri­c care.

Phase 2 will include the constructi­on of facilities for community resources and recreation, employment services and psychiatri­c urgent care.

The redevelopm­ent of General Hospital, which could begin constructi­on in 2024 with a target complestor­y, tion of 2026, constitute­s Phase 3.

The project will also allow for the possibilit­y for community and commercial space, such as child care, a gym or a grocery store, according to Solis’ office.

Developers will reach out to local communitie­s for applicants for General Hospital’s affordable housing units.

General Hospital’s 19the 1.2 million-square-foot Art Deco building opened in 1934 about a mile and a half from downtown Los Angeles. Due to its proximity to skid row and other underserve­d communitie­s, the hospital became a provider of medical services for unhoused and low-income residents.

In January 1994, the hospital was damaged by the Northridge earthquake and fell out of compliance with fire safety and earthquake codes.

The new L.A. CountyUSC Medical Center complex was erected next door, and in 2008, operations were moved.

Most of the original General Hospital building remains unused, though its lower floors are home to the Wellness Center, a U.S. Navy medical training center and several county department­s.

In November 2018, Solis wrote a motion directing a feasibilit­y study for the reuse of the building. The results of the study, which were presented to the board in April of this year, recommende­d that the hospital be repurposed to include hundreds of affordable housing units and expand services from the Wellness Center.

 ?? Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? BILL WALTON, the facilities operation manager of L.A. County-USC Medical Center, shows an operating room Monday at General Hospital, a mostly vacant building that’s been closed for decades in Boyle Heights.
Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times BILL WALTON, the facilities operation manager of L.A. County-USC Medical Center, shows an operating room Monday at General Hospital, a mostly vacant building that’s been closed for decades in Boyle Heights.
 ?? ?? CONSTRUCTI­ON at General Hospital could begin in 2024. Officials say the project could also include community and commercial space.
CONSTRUCTI­ON at General Hospital could begin in 2024. Officials say the project could also include community and commercial space.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? A VISITOR takes a photo Monday at the entrance of Los Angeles County General Hospital in Boyle Heights. County officials plan to convert the mostly vacant building into housing for low- and middle-income renters.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times A VISITOR takes a photo Monday at the entrance of Los Angeles County General Hospital in Boyle Heights. County officials plan to convert the mostly vacant building into housing for low- and middle-income renters.

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