St. Luke’s Anderson Campus marks 10th anniversary
When St. Luke’s Anderson Campus opened a decade ago, it was the first new, full-service, acute-care hospital in Pennsylvania in 40 years. Built on 500 acres of farmland with a state-of-the-art cancer center, medical office building, specialty and primary care services – along with private rooms, beautiful views and plenty of parking – the campus was and still is unique to the area.
Now, 10 years later, in addition to providing high quality medical care, the Anderson Campus has become a reliable and outstanding community resource, nestled in a beautiful natural setting ideal for healing, rest and recovery.
“This campus, constructed during the greatest economic recession since the Great Depression, represents St. Luke’s commitment to the Lehigh Valley and our hopeful vision of the region’s future,” said Richard A. Anderson, St. Luke’s longtime president & CEO for whom the Network’s Board of Trustees voted to name the campus in 2010. “St. Luke’s leadership understood that building a new hospital at that time would provide an extremely timely and powerful economic stimulus when the region needed it most. We also believed this new campus would allow St. Luke’s to continue to meet our community’s expanding health care needs for generations to come.”
Welcomed by the community and fueled by an overwhelming demand, the campus expanded in 2013. The same year, the Anderson Campus partnered with the Rodale Institute and opened the St. Luke’s Rodale Institute Organic Farm. By providing patients and employees with organic produce grown onsite, St. Luke’s has demonstrated its commitment to the environment by promoting the health of its patients and the community.
The campus once again expanded in 2017, opening a new $26-million Specialty Pavilion with additional specialty services and an Ambulatory Surgery Center.
In January 2020, the Anderson Campus Women & Babies Pavilion opened, housing a labor and delivery unit and neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), doubling the size of the existing hospital. This $75 million pavilion also provides graduate medical education space and a simulation teaching center for multiple residency programs at St. Luke’s Anderson Campus. This expansion represented St. Luke’s commitment not only to mothers, babies and families, but also to training the next generation of health care providers to care for them.
“Over the past 10 years – and especially through the COVID-19 pandemic – it has been my great privilege to lead the dedicated team who continuously work to improve St. Luke’s Anderson Campus year after year,” says Ed Nawrocki, president of St. Luke’s Anderson Campus. “Through strategic growth we have honored our commitment of providing access to quality health care and will continue to do so long into the future.”
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