University of Michigan Hospital University Hospital is the main hospital for adult patients. It opened in 1986 and has 550 beds. The majority of patients come from outside the Ann Arbor area.
C. S. Mott Children's and Von Voigtlander Women's Hospital C.S. Mott Children's Hospital opened in 2011 with 348 beds in the 12-story inpatient tower for children and adolescents including a Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Unit, a 46-bed Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, 12 operating rooms, diagnostic facilities, rehabilitation facilities, a gift shop, indoor and outdoor play areas, a classroom, and a chapel. This facility is attached to a 9-story outpatient clinic. The hospital is and consists of a 12-story inpatient wing and a nine-story outpatient wing. There are 348 beds, including 50 maternity rooms and 46
neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) rooms. The expansion increases the number of beds at the hospital by 75 percent and makes the hospital the largest of Michigan's three children's hospitals. Every inpatient room is private, in contrast to the old facility, which had mostly double occupancy rooms. The new hospital has 16
operating rooms and two interventional radiology rooms. The first Women's Hospital opened in 1950, while the original C.S. Mott Children's Hospital opened in 1969 and traces its origin to a small ward for sick children that began in 1903. The new hospital was the most expensive building project in University of Michigan history and one of the most expensive construction projects in state history. Of the $754 million cost, the university financed $588 million through tax-exempt bonds, $91 million through cash reserves from hospital operations, and $75 million through fundraising. The C. S. Mott Children's and Von Voigtlander Women's Hospital employs about 4,000 people and is gradually hiring 500 more now that the hospital expansion is complete.
Rogel Cancer Center Rogel Cancer Center (formerly Comprehensive Cancer Center) was founded in 1986 and includes cancer research and clinical care. The cancer center building opened in 1997. Its nine-stories contain four floors dedicated to outpatient cancer care for adults and children, six floors for cancer research laboratories. The facility also features 77 clinic rooms, 42 chemotherapy infusion suites, 7 procedure rooms, 2 outpatient surgical suites, Mohs skin cancer unit, patient education center, cancer survivor art gallery. In 2006, the center received $82.5 million in research funding, making it the seventh in the United States in the number of National Cancer Institute (NCI) research awards. It is one of 51 programs in the country to earn the NCI's "comprehensive" designation and one of 28 centers in the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.
W.K. Kellogg Eye Center and Brehm Center for Diabetes Research The W.K. Kellogg Eye Center is the home of the University of Michigan Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, part of the Medical School and Michigan Medicine. The Kellogg Eye Center has 64 clinical faculty and 21 research faculty (including nine
endowed professorships), 21
residents, 17 research fellows and 11 clinical fellows. The Department of Ophthalmology was established in 1872 and has served patients at least as early as 1904, when there were 1,400 patient visits to the Eye & Ear Ward. The Kellogg Eye Center opened in 1985; in that year, there were 36,852 visits to the center. In 2011, there were 140,104 patient visits and over 5,783 surgical procedures performed. The Kellogg Eye Center has community clinics in Ann Arbor,
Brighton,
Canton,
Livonia,
Milford,
West Bloomfield, and
Ypsilanti. Eye Center residents also staff the VA Ophthalmology Clinic at the Veterans Affairs Hospital in Ann Arbor. The expanded W.K. Kellogg Eye Center and new Brehm Center for Diabetes Research opened in March 2010. The $132 million expansion project built the Brehm Tower, an eight-story research and clinical building expands space for the Kellogg Eye Center by 50 percent. The Eye Center is located on the tower's six lower floors, and the Brehm Center is housed on the upper two floors, with its
Diabetes mellitus type 1 research laboratories. (
Diabetes can cause
vision loss). The tower includes nine eye clinics, six
operating rooms, and new
refractive surgery and
cosmetic surgery suites, as well as facilities for support services such as
genetic counseling, ophthalmic photography, diagnostic
visual electrophysiological testing, and
ocular prosthetics. The tower also houses a
library, optical shop, and café. The Eye Center has 20 research laboratories in the new building and in the adjoining research tower. The BSRB opened in February 2006 and is around The $220 million building occupies a site by and is high. It is the largest research facility on campus and covers an entire
city block. The design has been described as "striking...emphasizing light and curves," with its south wall being a "curved, glass ribbon of office space, which is separated from the
terra cotta- and metal-clad laboratory areas by a sky-lit
atrium." The building won a 2007 AIA Honor Award for architecture. The building contains six levels, including two partial levels, of research laboratories and offices, and features a basement, a two-level
vivarium space that includes an imaging core, surgery, behavioral testing suite, aquatics suite, and cage/rack washing facilities. It houses 144 faculty offices; of divisible seminar room and break-out area; of linear equipment space; alcoves for
tissue culture,
fume hoods, general bench space and
lab entries. and U-M Program for Neurology Research and Discovery (P-FUND). Construction planning by the
New York City-based architectural firm of
Polshek Partnership Architects began in 2001, with final design approval in 2002 and groundbreaking in April 2003. Within the building is the 300-seat Kahn Auditorium, named for philanthropists D. Dan and Betty Kahn of
Bloomfield Hills, who gave $6 million to the university for cardiovascular research. The auditorium is sometimes called "The
Pringle" because of its resemblance to the brand of potato chips.
Life Sciences Institute The
Life Sciences Institute, an interdisciplinary
life science research institute that conducts scientific research, is not officially part of Michigan Medicine, but many of its faculty have joint appointments in the Medical School. LSI consists of three centers: The Center for Chemical Genomics (
chemical genetics), Center for Stem Cell Biology (
stem cell research), and Center for Structural Biology (
structural biology). LSI also have several scientific cores: The DNA Sequencing Core (
DNA sequencing), the Flow Cytometry Core (
flow cytometry), the Functional Genomic Core (
functional genomics), the Metabolic Phenotyping Core, the Vivarium ( for small animals and fish), the NMR Suite (
nuclear magnetic resonance), and the Cryo-Electron Microscopy Laboratory (
cryo-electron microscopy). In 2007, the Life Sciences Institute entered into a research partnership with
Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.
Medical Science Research Buildings The three Medical Science Research Buildings, designated MSRB I, MSRB II and MSRB III, opened respectively in 1986, 1989, and 1995. They are home to basic research laboratories and shared "core" facilities for U-M biomedical researchers. MSRB I became home to the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) offices at the University of Michigan after the university was chosen to be one of 12 HHMI sites in the country in 2008. ==North Campus Research Complex==