The tennis courts that host the U.S. Open are being turned into a field hospital for coronavirus patients as New York City officials ramp up medical staff, supplies and facilities for an anticipated wave of COVID-19 patients in April and May, Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Tuesday.
Part of the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Queens will be converted into a temporary hospital with 350 beds for non-ICU patients from Elmhurst Hospital, which has been one of the facilities that has “borne the brunt” of the coronavirus pandemic spreading in the city, de Blasio said. “
I think the time horizon that’s of deepest concern to New York City is April-May, and thereafter we pray that we start to come out of this, but it won’t be instant,” de Blasio told reporters at the tennis center. “August may be a very, very much better time or we may still be fighting some of these battles. We don’t know yet. By late summer, we may get some good news.”
The tennis center is one of a handful of makeshift field hospitals the city is building to house coronavirus patients. De Blasio said the city is working with the federal government, the hotel industry and various other businesses to turn other buildings into potential medical facilities.
Over the weekend, Samaritan’s Purse and Mount Sinai Health System in New York City began erecting a field hospital in Central Park. The hospital is located in front of Mount Sinai Hospital in the park’s East Meadow and is scheduled to open on Tuesday, a spokesperson said.
De Blasio said it will take three weeks to fully build the hospital at the tennis center; patients will be transferred from Elmhurst Hospital starting next week.
“I think it’s very fitting, and I think Billie Jean would agree, that this place will be a lifesaving place,” de Blasio said.
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