On February 10, 1910, The Home laid the cornerstone for its new buildings on Gun Hill Road (East 210th Street) on October 27, 1912. The Mayor and Jacob H. Schiff, president of the Home, delivered tributes. Schiff announced that in addition to the present new buildings in the process of erection, subscriptions to the amount of had been secured for the erection of a pay pavilion, to accommodate such patients whose means did not allow them to secure nurse's attention at home, but could afford to pay a small amount for their care in an institution. The new Home would have the capacity for 200 inpatients more than the building in Manhattan, meaning that it would be able to accommodate about 700 patients. However, this would still not provide for all the applicants to the institution. At this location, the sanitarium went through several name changes including "Montefiore Home, a Hospital for Chronic Invalids and Country Sanitarium for Consumptives" (1911), "Montefiore Home and Hospital for Chronic Diseases" (1914), and "Montefiore Hospital for Chronic Diseases" (1920). it was no longer a sanitarium.
Architecture and fittings A number of very large buildings were placed in a comparatively restricted area without a semblance of congestion apparent in any part. The administration building faces the north with the tuberculosis hospital on the south and the other buildings occupying positions on either side, all connected with enclosed corridors for convenient service and administration. The group consists of either separate units: the administration building, the home, the dining hall and service wing, the synagogue, the tuberculosis hospital, the surgical and medical departments, and the employees' home. The entire group is designed in the spirit of
Georgian architecture. The administration building is considered the finest of the group. There is a singular absence of cold and forbidding institutional character in the design of this building. The main facade was conceived in a broad manner. The center of the group at the intersection of the main and transverse corridor is occupied by the home or dormitory pavilion, and in convenient proximity on either side of the main corridor are the synagogue and dining hall, directly in the rear of the building. This is an economic and convenient arrangement and the enclosed corridors make it comfortable for the patients who are not confined to their rooms to move about during inclement weather. The deck roofs of the corridors provide opportunities for the patients' outdoor exercise in pleasant weather. The pavilion for the tuberculosis patients is entirely separate from the remainder of the group save for a connecting corridor for service. This building has a long southern frontage with very large windows opening onto balconies at each of the two floors extending on either side of the central pavilion to the end wings. This building completely provides for the treatment and housing of tuberculosis patients. The first floor contains a central dining room flanked, on either side, by wings containing private rooms for two patients each and at the ends by large terminal wards. The bedrooms and wards occupy the entire southern exposure, the north being utilized by bathrooms, service rooms, and the main corridor. The buildings throughout are constructed of
reinforced concrete columns and
girders filled in with
vitrified terracotta blocks above grade. All of the
façades including those fronting on the courts are faced with a rough textured brick in various shades with the trim and decorative features executed in
architectural terracotta of gray color in harmony with the brick. The buildings are simply designed brick structures with the decorative features confined to the
cornices,
belt courses, and window
lintels, with the exception of the administration building, which is given a lighter and more graceful appearance by its proportions and the use of finely modeled terra cotta for its decorative detail. The broad
pilasters with their bold
Corinthian capitals executed in this material are effective. The
lunettes over the second-story windows as well as the
festoons and panels in the attic story are well designed. They indicate in an effective manner the versatility of terra cotta for fine decorative purposes and show its special aptitude for reproducing the conceptions of the sculptor and modeler. Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids, The Bronx (Detail 01) (The Brickbuilder, 1913).png Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids, The Bronx (Detail 02) (The Brickbuilder, 1913).png Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids, The Bronx (Detail 03) (The Brickbuilder, 1913).png Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids, The Bronx (Detail 04) (The Brickbuilder, 1913).png Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids, The Bronx (Detail 05) (The Brickbuilder, 1913).png ==Notable people==