JOPLIN, Mo. —
Julie Blankenship, a registered nurse with what now is Mercy Hospital Joplin, took a break Wednesday to recount the places she has worked since the May 22 tornado.
“First, it was a ditch,” she said. “Then it was Memorial Hall. Then we worked in the tent and the modular hospital. Now, we have this. It feels like a permanent hospital. One thing’s for certain: We keep getting better and better.”
On Wednesday, Mercy Hospital Joplin opened its doors to the public with a ribbon-cutting ceremony in advance of bringing patients to the $100 million component hospital on Sunday.
The hospital, located at 2817 St. John’s Blvd., will be used for the next three years while a new Mercy Hospital Joplin is constructed on a 100-acre campus at East 50th Street and Hearnes Boulevard. That hospital will be four times larger than the component hospital.
Gary Pulsipher, president of the hospital, said the component hospital, which took about 8 1/2 months to erect, might be used for some other purpose when the new hospital is opened, but no definite plans have been made. It is constructed of components, which will be disconnected at some point and moved to another site.
“We have a much bigger capacity now,” he said. “We’ll be able to deliver babies again. Another important thing is that we wanted to get into this building in time for the storm season.”
The design of the hospital includes a number of “condition gray” safety zones in interior corridors where people can seek shelter in the event of threatening weather. A Mercy spokesman said the steel and concrete structure is 30 percent stronger than the code requirements that were in place when the former St. John’s hospital was constructed. The glass in the hospital is rated to withstand winds of 200 mph. The EF-5 tornado that struck Joplin had winds of at least 200 mph and destroyed St. John’s.
The hospital was constructed with 224 custom units that were transported by trailer, and in some cases by train, from Walden Structures manufacturing plants in Southern California. Some of the units were 60 feet long by 14 feet wide and high. When the units arrived in Joplin, workers bolted them together.
The 150,000-square-foot hospital has 55 private rooms that can be converted into 110 semi-private rooms should the need arise. The emergency department has three triage rooms, 17 exam rooms and three trauma rooms. Surgeons can again conduct complex, open-heart procedures. The hospital has 10 labor and delivery rooms.
Patient rooms have the latest monitoring features and communication capabilities. The hospital also has a cafeteria, gift shop, pharmacy and chapel.
All of the medical equipment in the hospital is new. In some cases, it is better than the equipment used at the old hospital, St. John’s Regional Medical Center. The new hospital has a new CT scanner that captures images with twice the resolution.
Mike McCurry, Mercy’s executive vice president and chief operating officer, told those assembled for tours of the hospital on Wednesday that Mercy never considered leaving Joplin after the tornado, though only four of its 40 buildings in Joplin survived the storm.
“Our commitment was to the community, not to buildings,” he said.
McCurry said that when Walden Structures was approached about building the hospital, Mercy was told it would take at least 15 months to do the projects. By working around the clock with as many 500 workers on the site at a time, the project was completed within 8 1/2 months.
“What’s been done here has never been done before in the history of the country,” he said.
About Mercy
SISTERS OF MERCY HEALTH SYSTEM is the eighth largest Catholic health care system in the U.S. and serves more than 3 million people annually. Mercy has 31 hospitals, more than 200 outpatient operations, and 38,000 employees in Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma.
May 2011 Joplin tornado
Mercy opens new interim component hospital in Joplin
- May 2011 Joplin tornado
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Joplin team drove through storm to get to Moore
It was a long drive in the middle of a severe thunderstorm that had earlier produced a massive tornado in Moore, Okla. With the two-year anniversary of Joplin’s deadly twister approaching on Wednesday, a team of 14 Joplin emergency workers was ready to risk the trip in order to get help to a hurting Moore.
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SLIDESHOW: One year later, One day of unity, updated
Photos from a day of events commemorating the May 22, 2011 tornado anniversary
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Federal, state leaders salute Joplin’s recovery
A deadly May twister may have punched a hole in Joplin and Duquesne two years ago, but the resolve to repair it will help other communities stand strong when they face similar disasters. That was the message of state and national diginitaries to a crowd of about 2,500 who observed the second anniversary of Joplin’s devastating May 22, 2011, storm during a ceremony Wednesday in Cunningham Park.
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Banner from Joplin to be sent to Moore residents
A giant vinyl banner adorned with heartfelt messages from Joplin tornado survivors to the residents of Moore, Okla., became a centerpiece of Wednesday’s observance of the two-year anniversary of the May 22, 2011, tornado.
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Rick Rescorla award named for hero of Vietnam War, 9-11 terror attacks
The Rick Rescorla National Award for Resilience is named for a 62-year-old vice president of security for Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co. who directed an evacuation of the company’s 2,700-person workforce in the South Tower of the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2011.
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Community gearing up for two-year anniversary ceremony this afternoon
With the playground full of children, it could be any other day at Joplin’s Cunningham Park, but the white tents popping up and neat rows of white chairs lined up nearby indicate something more is happening today.
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Farmers Insurance teams up with Rebuild Joplin
Farmers Insurance announced Tuesday that the company will team up with Rebuild Joplin for an initiative to help the community complete its recovery efforts. The company already has placed one of its executives in Joplin, and it is pledging additional funds and volunteer hours by company workers to go toward the city’s recovery.
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Joplin man continues struggle to recover two years after tornado
As the Joplin tornado passed overhead, sweeping the house at 2430 S. Pennsylvania Ave. away in its wake, there was a moment of calm. Delbert Mcguirk was on his back in the basement, where he had sought shelter along with his wife, daughter and two grandchildren. In that moment of relative quiet, he stared up into the eye of the tornado.
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Storms cause damage throughout the Four States
Four-State Area residents hunkered down twice Monday to ride out tornadoes and powerful spring storms, then went to work cleaning up. The worst damage from Monday night’s storm was being reported in Ottawa County, Okla., near Wyandotte. That followed a report of an EF-1 tornado early Monday morning near Carthage.
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Two plead guilty to post-tornado wire theft
Two defendants pleaded guilty Monday to stealing copper wire from utility poles in the wake of the May 22, 2011, tornado that struck Joplin. Timothy M. Silveria, 45, of Joplin, and Nycoa K. Kracht, 32, of Laurel, Ind., entered open pleas of guilty in Jasper County Circuit Court to felony counts of theft from a public utility.
- More May 2011 Joplin tornado Headlines
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Joplin team drove through storm to get to Moore



