New $664M North Tower Opens at Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla

  • June 2, 2025

San Diego, CA, June 02, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — News from Scripps Health

June 2, 2025

Media Contact: Keith Darcé
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New $664M North Tower Opens at Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla

 First patients included newborn babies and expecting moms

LA JOLLA, Calif.  – Marking a major medical milestone for the San Diego region, Scripps Health yesterday opened the doors to Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla’s new North Tower, a $664 million, 8-floor inpatient building that features comprehensive mother-baby services, advanced technology operating rooms and spacious private patient rooms designed for premier care.

For about four hours starting at 8:15 a.m., a virtual army of physicians, nurses and technicians moved 130 patients — including newborn babies and expecting moms — from the campus’ original hospital structure, known as the Browning Building, into the new adjacent tower through a enclosed connecting passageways.

“Today’s opening marks Scripps Health’s latest investment in its century-long commitment to providing patient-centered care to the community while fostering innovative collaboration among our exceptional physicians, nurses and hospital employees,” said Scripps President and CEO Chris Van Gorder. “The North Tower is a cutting-edge medical resource, and it will be a place of healing for generations to come.”

The first patients to move into North Tower were Lauren Dehasque of Rancho Santa Fe and new-born daughter Freja. They were accompanied by husband and dad Thibaud Dehasque.

Lauren marveled at the floor-to-ceiling window views of nearby mountains from her
seventh level room and said she was excited to be the first official occupant of a building that will serve the needs of patients in the community for decades to come. “It’s just so bright and beautiful,” she said.

Each patient was accompanied during their move by a clinical care transport team. Physicians also were present to assist if needed. In all, 14 transport teams took part in the moves.

With the opening, Scripps La Jolla’s bed count now totals 495 licensed to Scripps and another 36 neonatal intensive care (NICU) beds licensed to Rady Children’s Hospital San Diego. Previously, the campus had 426 licensed beds. The North Tower contains 188 inpatient beds.

The 420,000-square-foot structure of glass, brick and steel, which overlooks Genesee Avenue and Interstate 5, took eight years to plan and construct. As a premier destination for medical and surgical innovations, the tower’s design was focused on elevating and personalizing the patient experience through innovative medical and surgical care, while fostering greater efficiency for staff members and employees. Large windows that let in natural light, soothing colors, private rooms, spacious lounges and garden areas all contribute to the comfort, recovery and healing of patients.

Expanded care for mothers and babies
Mother-baby services are located on three floors that include 18 private labor and delivery rooms (five of which are antepartum rooms); two cesarean section operating rooms; 24 neonatal intensive care unit NICU beds; and 38 post-partum beds. Six of the labor and delivery rooms are equipped with large soaking tubs for pain management during the labor process. The post-partum floor includes a nursery and a boutique with special items to support a new mother’s needs. Wireless vital sign monitoring gives patients the freedom to move around the hospital without being physically tethered to their bed.

“About 3,200 babies are delivered at Scripps La Jolla each year,” Ronald Salzetti, M.D., department chair of obstetrics and gynecology for Scripps Clinic. “The opening of the North Tower ensures that those infants and their mothers will continue to receive the very best care possible in a place that was built with the future in mind, allowing for services and technology to evolve as medicine continues to advance.”

As has been the case since 1993, the specialized care offered in the NICU is being provided through a partnership with Rady Children’s Hospital that brings together clinical teams from the two nationally recognized health systems to provide the latest advances in the diagnosis and treatment of infants who need higher levels of care.

“More than 500 babies are admitted to our NICU annually, making this the busiest such unit in the entire Scripps Health system,” said Jane O’Donnell, M.D., medical director of the Rady Children’s at Scripps La Jolla NICU. “We’re so thankful for this beautiful new space to provide advanced, compassionate care for the smallest and most fragile babies that deliver at Scripps.”

North Tower also is home to inpatient services for cancer, orthopedics, neurology, stroke, spine and trauma.

Other floors of the hospital feature 96 adult medical/surgical beds; 12 additional medical/surgical beds that can be used as adult ICU beds when needed; nine operating rooms including two with robotic surgery equipment that helps to reduce surgical complications and shorten hospital stays; 40 pre- and post-surgery beds; and 12 observational beds. The lower floor includes an enhanced imaging center and three interventional radiology suites.

$2.5 million gift from Barbara Smith
The ground-level floor is home to a bright and spacious cafeteria that was made possible by a generous $2.5 million gift from La Jolla philanthropist Barbara Smith. The William W. and Barbara Smith Cafeteria offers a wide range of healthy food choices to staff, patients and visitors with a menu curated by Chef Judd Canepari, director of culinary services at Scripps.

Smith, whose husband was treated for cancer at Scripps before passing away, has been a long-time supporter of the health system. Her prior donations benefitted the Prebys Cardiovascular Institute, Scripps Cancer Center and Scripps Clinic’s John R. Anderson V Medical Pavilion. She also has worked as a volunteer at the Scripps La Jolla gift shop, participated in the pet therapy program and knitted baby caps for Scripps’ youngest patients.

“I truly believe this latest gift would have made my husband happy, and it gives me a sense of joy to know that I’m honoring his memory in this way,” said Smith, whose donation continued a legacy of community generosity that has formed the foundation of Scripps’ success for generations. “I hope that by donating I was able to make a difference, even if it’s just a tiny one. Every little bit counts.”

Mirroring the adjacent Prebys Cardiovascular Institute, the North Tower complies with all seismic building requirements and was designed with a curved shape to reduce the distance that staff members need to travel when moving among patients, improves visibility of patients from nurses stations, decreases disruptions on the floor and enhances security.

Advanced hospital technology and design
Inside, the tower offers spacious private patient rooms that allow for the most advanced, lifesaving equipment and care when necessary. The design was driven by evidence-based principles and shaped with input from physicians, nurses, leadership, architects and support staff who provided guidance on best practices for patient care. The tower is also designed with the future in mind in ways that will make upgrades and renovations easier and less costly.

Other notable features include:

  • Three neurointerventional radiology suites, focused on treating stroke and brain aneurysms, include two rooms equipped with state-of-the-art, bi-plane imaging systems that allow for faster and more precise treatments with minimal radiation exposure.
  • An air flow system in each operating room that directs airborne particles away from the patient and staff while filling the room with HEPA-filtered air, making the North Tower the first hospital on the West Coast to offer this advanced air filtration technology.
  • An integrated system that ties together operating room technologies, such as surgical devices, cameras, video screens, procedural lights and patient information to physicians, nurses and technicians to operate more efficiently and safely.
  • Decentralized nursing stations to closely monitor patients and communicate with family members.
  • Supply areas specifically located on floors so that nurses and other workers have shorter walks to get what they need.
  • A three-tiered wireless infrastructure dedicated to enterprise, medical and consumer use that maintains maximum security and capabilities for clinicians.
  • Patient rooms and hallways bathed in natural light and outdoor views from floor-to-ceiling windows.
  • An organic, spa-like color palette proven to increase patients’ sense of well-being and to boost the healing process.
  • Private patient rooms with LCD televisions that can display clinical images, such as CT scans, and pullout couches so family members can stay comfortably overnight.
  • Lobby areas on each floor provide comfortable, relaxing space for family members and visitors to enjoy without being far from patient rooms.

Additionally, the North Tower connects directly to the Prebys Cardiovascular Institute tower through their lower three levels as well as passageways linking the third through seventh floors.

Rooftop helipad
The rooftop of the new tower supports a helipad for civilian air ambulance helicopters delivering trauma patients to the hospital. Elevators provide priority access for moving those patients quickly and safely to the tower’s ground floor, which connects directly to the Barbey Family Emergency and Trauma Center in the Prebys tower. Heavier military air ambulance helicopters will continue to use a ground-level heliport located on the north end of the campus.

The North Tower is the latest piece of a visionary 25-year master plan, unveiled in 2010, that has transformed the Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla campus into the region’s premier medical center with the earlier additions of the Prebys Cardiovascular Institute tower, the Scripps Clinic John R. Anderson V Medical Pavilion, a centralized energy plant and a five-floor parking structure.

With the opening, nearly all inpatient services previously located in the Browning Building have now been moved to the adjacent North Tower, with the exception of 12 NICU rooms and a sixth-floor medical/surgical unit, which will serve as an inpatient overflow area for the new tower.

The Browning Building also continues to house cardiology electrophysiology labs, three operating rooms, a pre- and post-surgery recovery area and most of the campus’ administration offices.

McCarthy Building Companies served as the construction management firm on behalf of Scripps for the North Tower construction project, HGA was the architect and Jacobs was the program/project manager.

ABOUT SCRIPPS HEALTH
Founded in 1924 by philanthropist Ellen Browning Scripps, Scripps Health is a nonprofit integrated health care delivery system based in San Diego, Calif. Scripps treats more than 600,000 patients annually through the dedication of 3,000 affiliated physicians and more than 17,000 employees among its five acute-care hospital campuses, more than 70 outpatient and specialty care locations, and hundreds of affiliated physician offices throughout the region.

Recognized as a leader in disease and injury prevention, diagnosis and treatment, Scripps is also at the forefront of clinical research and is the only health system in the region with two level 1 trauma centers. With highly respected graduate medical education programs at all five hospital campuses, Scripps is a longstanding member of the Association of American Medical Colleges. Scripps has been ranked seven times as one of the nation’s best health care systems by PINC AI, formerly known as Merative, IBM Watson Health and Truven Health Analytics. Its hospitals are consistently ranked by U.S. News & World Report among of the nation’s best and Scripps is recognized by the Advisory Board, Fortune and Working Mother magazine as one of the best places in the nation to work. More information can be found at www.scripps.org.

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PHOTO CUTLINE:  New mom Lauren Dehasque of Rancho Santa Fe and newborn daughter Freja were the first patients to move into the North Tower at Scripps Memorial Hospital San Diego when the building opened June 1. They were joined by husband and dad Thibaud Dehasque.

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