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The Commission on Chicago Landmarks appreciates receiving ideas and suggestions from the public for potential future landmark buildings and districts. By ordinance, Chicago Landmarks must meet at least two of the seven criteria for designation as well as an integrity criterion (see back). An indicator of whether your suggestion may qualify is if the property is included in the Chicago Historic Resources Survey (CHRS), which is depicted in the citys online Zoning Map and may also be accessed from the Chicago Landmarks web page at www.cityofchicago.org/landmarks. Please answer the questions below completely and include current photographs (which will not be returned) and any available historic research you may have as part of your suggestion. Please fill out one form per suggestion. The Commissions Program Committee generally reviews public suggestions twice a year. Received suggestions are forwarded by the Committee to the Department of Housing and Economic Development for further consideration.
Commission on Chicago Landmarks 33 N. LaSalle Street Suite 1600 Chicago, Illinois 60602 Attention: Program Committee
Your Name: Your Address (Street, City & Zip Code): Your Telephone Number: Suggested Building or Area: Address: Date of Construction:
Friends of Cuneo
E-mail: friendsofcuneo (at) gmail.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FriendsOfCuneo Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/98922841@N05/
Cuneo Hospital with Skybridge and Cuneo Long-Term Care and Rehabilitation Facilities 750 W. Montrose Avenue (4536 N. Clarendon; 824830 W. Montrose + 839841 W. Agatite) 1957, 1975 Belli & Belli Architects & Engineers
Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus unknown Two decades of mid-century design by Belli & Belli, a Chicago-area family-run architecture
and engineering firm that has engaged communities in progressive architecture both locally and internationally for over 70 years Extensive use of design features in the 1950s & 1970s that demonstrate a continuum with sustainable design practices today. Located at midpoint of non-commercial street lined with historically significant examples from every era of Chicago's built environment, including historic lakefront land fill and beach house. . X Current Photograph(s) Enclosed (REQUIRED Suggestion form will be returned unless accompanied by current photographs)
Architectural Importance or Noteworthy Physical Features:
Additional Background Information Enclosed (Up to 5 pages will be forwarded to Commission members for their review; any additional pages will be kept for Commission files.)
CHRS ___________________
HED ______________________________________
Suggestion
for
Chicago
Landmark:
Cuneo
Hospital
campus,
Montrose
&
Clarendon
Avenues
Part
of
the
Collective
Heritage
Cuneo
Hospital
and
Cuneo
Long-Term
Care
and
Rehabilitation
Facilities
illustrate
the
contributions
of
Belli
&
Belli
Architects
&
Engineers
Inc.
to
Chicago
architecture
over
two
very
different
American
decades.
Cuneo
Hospital
on
the
east
side
of
Clarendon
was
designed
and
built
during
the
post-WWII
building
boom
of
the
1950s,
which
saw
complex
community
design
challenges
emerge,
particularly
in
ecclesiastical
building,
due
to
a
rapidly
expanding
and
diversifying
population
and
changing
values.1
Cuneo
Long-Term
Care
and
Rehabilitation
Facilities
on
the
west
side
of
Clarendon
was
conceived
and
built
during
the
harder
economic
times
of
the
1970s,
an
era
bookended
by
energy
crises
when
the
continued
shift
to
suburban
family
living
sometimes
meant
fewer
resources
for
still-urban
populations
as
in
Uptown.2
Diminutive,
ultramodern
Cuneo
Hospital,
dedicated
in
1957,
originally
sat
nimbly
alongside
the
aging
Lake
View
Pumping
Station,
built
during
the
years
19071915,
until
the
latters
demolition
in
1979.
The
geometrical,
brutalist
Cuneo
Long-Term
Care
and
Rehabilitation
Facilities
were
added
to
the
west
side
of
Clarendon,
with
construction
begun
in
late
1975
completed
in
late
1976,
after
careful
consideration
of
several
expansion
options,
including
moving
the
original
hospital
to
the
west
side
of
Clarendon
where
more
land
was
available.
Whereas
the
pumping
station
and
Clarendon
Park
Beach
House
(1916)
had
been
built
on
the
original
beachfront,
Cuneo
Hospital
and
Cuneo
Long-Term
Care
and
Rehabilitation
Facilities
were
designed
and
constructed
during
the
decades
immediately
following
the
landfillwith
special
measures
below
grade
to
address
encroaching
water
at
the
former
lakefront
site.
Early
pictures
of
the
hospital
campus
show
the
rich
proximities
of
the
original
historic
location.3
From
the
outset
Cuneo
Hospital
shared
another
and
very
direct
tie
to
its
historic
site:
it
was
literally
linked
via
its
futuristic
1957
skybridge
to
the
early
twentieth-century
convent
on
the
other
side
of
Clarendon
Avenue
where
the
hospitals
owner-staff
lived.
The
convent
was
a
three-story,
six-flat
apartment
building
similar
to
many
nearbyincluding
in
the
nationally
registered
Buena
Park
Historic
District
located
on
the
other
side
of
Montrose
Avenue
today.
The
daylit
skybridge
later
came
to
link
the
original
Cuneo
Hospital
building
to
yet
another
architectural
era
when
it
was
reused
to
bridge
Clarendon
Avenue
to
Cuneo
Long-Term
Care
and
Rehabilitation
Facilities
that
replaced
the
convent
in
197576.
The
silvery
skybridge
that
connects
the
decades
on
either
side
of
Clarendon
Avenue
has
been
a
steadfast
feature
of
the
visual
landscape
of
lakefront
Uptown
for
over
fifty
years.
1
On the ecclesiatical building boom specifically, see Jay M . Price, Temples for a M odern God: Religious Architecture in Postwar America (Oxford U niversity Press, 2012). 2 For conditions in U ptown, see, for example, Roger Guy, From D iversity to Unity: Southern and Appalachian M igrants in U ptown Chicago, 19501970 (Lexington Books/Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2007). 3 See photos: http://www.flickr.com/photos/98922841@N05/ a nd https://www.facebook.com/FriendsOfCuneo
Significant
People
In
the
mid-1950s,
the
Uptown
community
was
the
fortunate
beneficiary
of
a
confluence
of
commitment
that
ultimately
led
to
the
building
of
Cuneo
Hospital
by
instrumental
and
capable
parties,
among
them
John
F.
Cuneo
Sr.,
Cardinal
Samuel
Stritch,
The
Missionary
Sisters
of
the
Sacred
Heart
of
Jesus,
and
Belli
&
Belli
Company.
John
Cuneo
Sr.
was
the
owner
of
Hawthorn
Mellody
Farms
Dairy
as
well
as
founder
and
owner
of
Cuneo
Pressat
the
time
one
of
the
three
largest
printing
presses
in
the
world.
A
philanthropist
and
patron
of
the
arts,
Cuneo
wanted
to
build
a
childrens
hospital,
to
be
owned
and
operated
the
Missionary
Sisters
of
the
Sacred
Heart
of
Jesus,
for
the
burgeoning
postwar
community.
The
Missionary
Sisters
of
the
Sacred
Heart,
founded
by
Mother
Cabrini
and
devoted
to
the
care
of
women,
children,
and
the
elderly,
had
for
decades
worked
extensively
in
poor
and
immigrant
communities
in
Chicago.
Edo
J.
Belli
met
John
Cuneo
through
Cardinal
Samuel
Stritch,
who
championed
progressive
architecture
for
the
building
of
neighborhood
schools,
churches,
and
hospitals
during
his
time
as
Archbishop
of
Chicago
from
1940
until
his
death
in
1958.
The
first
American
ever
appointed
to
lead
a
department
of
the
Roman
Curia,
as
Pro-Prefect
of
Congregation
for
the
Evangelization
of
Peoples,
Stritchs
interest
in
new
architecture
had
led
him
to
a
vital,
continuous
working
relationship
with
Edo
J.
Belli,
the
designer
of
the
Cuneo
Hospital
campus.
An
interview
compiled
under
the
auspices
of
the
Chicago
Architects
Oral
History
Project
archived
at
The
Art
Institute
of
Chicago
records
Edo
J.
Bellis
description
of
his
first
contacts
with
Cuneo
as
follows:
He
had
offered
me
the
shopping
center,
the
Golf
Mill
Shopping
Center,
and
I
had
turned
him
down
because
I
had
enough
work
to
keep
me
busy.
I
felt
I
couldnt
service
the
account
the
way
hed
want
it
serviced.
I
told
him
in
a
nice
way
that
I
wasnt
interested
in
that
kind
of
work,
that
I
was
interested
in
church
work.
So
he
said,
Well,
if
youre
interested
in
church
work,
Im
going
to
build
a
hospital.
Important
Architecture
Preservation
Chicagos
2012
brief
describes
the
Cuneo
Hospital
building
dedicated
by
Cardinal
Stritch
on
Oct.
3,
1957,
in
a
ceremony
attended
by
then-mayor
Richard
J.
Daley,
as
the
most
modern
of
hospitals,
including
a
stunning
lobby
and
operating
rooms
with
patterned
walls
and
floors
of
individually
designed
Romany-Spartan
glazed
tile
walls.4 Still
in
remarkably
good
condition
on
exterior
round
columns
at
Cuneo
Hospital
today,
the
specially
produced
tiles
from
the
United
States
Ceramic
Tile
Co.
in
Ohio
typify
the
up-to-date
nature
of
the
projectthe
Romany
Spartan
name
had
first
been
used
in
commerce
on
Dec.
29,
1956.
The
brief
continues:
Architect
Edo
J.
Belli
introduced
a
new
modernism
to
Roman
Catholic
architecture
in
Chicago,
including
St.
Patricks
High
School
at
5900
W.
Belmont
and
St.
Joseph
4
Hospital
at
2900
N.
Lake
Shore
Drive.
Cuneo
Memorial
Hospital
demonstrates
his
whimsical
yet
thoughtful
approach
to
hospital
design,
including
a
roof
line
that
resembles
an
artists
palette.
Belli
combined
lyricism
with
modern
materials
to
create
his
own
architectural
style,
one
that
departed
ever
so
slightly
from
the
rigid
Miesian
orthodoxy
that
dominated
architectural
expression
at
that
time.
Bellis
unique
approach
to
space
is
well
illustrated
by
Cuneo
Hospital,
where
curved
faades,
bending
interior
walls,
and
circular
operating
rooms
optimize
the
use
of
limited
space
to
allow
for
wide
range
of
different
but
interwoven
functions
with
very
different
lighting
&
privacy
requirements.
Positioning
it
on
a
tiny,
irregular
piece
of
land
to
take
advantage
of
sun
and
lake
breezes,
Edo
J.
Belli
utilized
design
features
commonly
associated
today
with
sustainable
design,
filling
Cuneo
Hospital
with
daylight
and
naturally
warmed
spaces,
optimizing
non-mechanical
ventilation
strategies
and
interior
sightlines,
and
specifying
materials
sourced
from
Midwestern
family-run
producers.
Circular,
tiled
operating
rooms
required
less
water
and
fewer
chemicals
for
cleaning.
Modest
alcoves
and
the
daylit
skybridge
offered
privacy
and
protection
from
the
elements.
Zoning
variances
allowed
for
reduced
parking
and
transit-friendly
access.
The
patterned
faade,
integrated
planters,
and
variegated
windows
continue
to
protect
birds
even
today
and
naturalistic
stonework
speaks
to
the
lakeside
location.
A
shaded
terrace
tucked
under
the
eaves
affords
views
of
both
sunrise
and
sunset,
and,
through
one
of
Bellis
signature
circles,
the
sky
and
stars
above.
Cuneo
Long-Term
Care
and
Rehabilitation
Facilities
continued
into
the
1970s
where
the
1957
building
had
left
off
by
enlarging
sheltered
and
shaded
areas
at
street
level,
stretching
roof
terraces
over
many
carefully
layered
shapes,
and
angling
windows
into
facets
to
optimize
daylighting.
Designed
to
expand
services
to
cover
the
whole
of
life,
the
expansion
used
new
geometries
to
allow
residents
indoor
and
outdoor
life
within
the
same
building.
A
small
terrace
just
below
the
roof
on
Montrose
Avenue
mirrors
Cuneo
Hospitals
integrated
terrace
just
below
roof
level
also
overlooking
Montrose
Avenue,
updating
the
earlier
circular
view
to
the
sky
with
a
bold
triangular
opening.
Series
of
paced
square
windows
in
the
1957
building
have
been
reimagined
into
elongated
rectangles
that
stand
like
shadows
at
attention
behind
sleek
round
support
columns.
Horizontal
bars
of
glass
replace
large
sections
of
wall
near
ceiling
height,
allowing
for
diffuse
interior
daylight
from
both
east
and
west.
A
multifaceted
glass
cube
facing
east
and
perched
atop
an
upper
floor
gives
parallel
access
onto
two
large
roof
terraces
atop
the
level
immediately
below.
Layered
shapes
placed
at
angles
create
unexpected
access
to
the
outdoors,
most
dramatically
in
the
chapel
with
intricate
stained
glass
that
hovers
above
a
circular
entrance
space
while
carrying
a
roof
terrace
above.
Important
Architect
Responsible
for
these
designs
was
Edo
J.
Belli,
born
in
Chicago
in
1918
and
trained
in
part
already
while
at
Lane
Tech
High
School.5
Belli
began
working
with
the
architectural
firm
5
Holsman
&
Holsman
in
1936
and
the
firm
encouraged
him
to
enroll
in
evening
classes
at
Chicagos
Armour
Institute
of
Technology
(later
IIT),
from
which
he
graduated
in
1939.
Belli
also
worked
for
Graham,
Anderson,
Probst
&
White
and
Perkins
&
Will
prior
to
founding
Edo
J.
and
Anthony
J.
Belli
with
his
brother
in
1941.
Edo
Belli
was
chief
designer
at
the
firm,
where
he
worked
until
his
death
in
2003.
Anthony
handled
the
technical
sides
of
construction
up
until
the
late
1970s.
Edos
sons,
Allen
and
James,
continue
to
operate
the
firm
Belli
&
Belli,
a
family- owned
and
operated
firm
that
has
successfully
completed
over
3500
commissions
in
18
states
&
6
countries
since
its
founding
in
1941.6
Mr.
Belli
was
a
rare
community-minded
individualist,
a
Chicago-trained
architect
whose
quietly
influential
work
and
insightful
words
have
been
exhibited
and
recorded
at
The
Art
Institute
of
Chicago
and
honored
by
the
AIA,
American
Hospital
Association,
the
Catholic
Properties
Administration,
and
others.7
Committing
his
professional
life
to
creating
churches,
schools,
and
hospitals
throughout
the
Chicago
area
and
beyond,
Belli
in
particular
designed
and
developed
circular
forms
and
cores
within
the
context
of
mid-century
modern
architectures
dominant
rectilinear
orientation,
thereby
influencing
later
Modernist
buildings
in
Chicago
such
as
Bertrand
Goldbergs
Marina
City
and
Prentice
Hospital.
Belli
was
interviewed
by
Barbara
Blum
under
the
auspices
of
the
Chicago
Architects
Oral
History
Project,
the
Ernest
Graham
Study
Center
for
Architectural
Drawings,
Department
of
Architecture,
the
Art
Institute
of
Chicago8
and
images
of
his
work
is
included
in
the
Ryerson
&
Burnham
Archival
Image
Collection
at
the
Art
Institute
of
Chicago9
and
the
Hedrich
Blessing
Archive
housed
at
the
Chicago
History
Museum.10
Edo
J.
Bellis
works
exhibited
as
part
of
The
Art
Institute
of
Chicagos
1993
exhibition
Chicago
Architecture
and
Design
19231993
included
St.
Joseph
Hospital
and
St.
Patrick
High
School,
which
had
each
won
AIA
Honor
Awards
for
Excellence
in
Architecture,
as
well
as
The
Miracle
House
and
St.
Benedict
the
African
Church.
The
latter
two
projects
in
particular
reflect
Belli
&
Bellis
special
engagement
over
many
decades
with
creative
collaborations
on
a
neighborhood
level.
Miracle
House,
a
fully
furnished
ultra
modern
concept
home
located
in
Chicagos
Galewood
neighborhood,
was
designed,
sourced,
and
built
in
195354
to
be
raffled
off
at
a
benefit
for
nearby
St.
Williams
Parish
Building
Program.11
St.
Benedict
the
African,
dedicated
in
1990,
had
the
difficult
task
of
unifying
and
consolidating
several
parishes
of
Englewood
into
a
single
building.
The
Belli
&
Belli
design
that
grew
out
of
the
process
is
described
by
parishioner
Dorothy
Banks
in
Grant
Picks
1991
Chicago
Reader
article:
When
I
walk
in
this
place,
I
feel
excitement
and
joy
Its
like
I
own
it.
My
God
is
here.12
6 7
Belli & Belli Architects & Engineers (website), http://www.belli-belli.com/ Some awards listed o n Belli & Belli Architects & Engineers website, see note 6 . 8 Interview may be downloaded from the Archive or viewed online: http://www.artic.edu/edo-j-belli-1918-2003 9 See, for example, St. Joseph Hospital: http://digital-libraries.saic.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/mqc/id/39012/rec/1 10 Hedrich Blessing Archive, http://www.hedrichblessing.com/classicarchivehe.html 11 Description from discussion with J im a nd Allen Belli, March 8, 2013, at Belli & Bellis offices in Wheeling, Illinois. 12 Grant Pick, Resurrection, Chicago Reader, August 8, 1991, http://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/resurrection/Content?oid=878047
Unique
Visual
Features
The
curvilinear
faade,
rough-hewn
crucifix,
circular
tiled
surgical
rooms,
and
circular
roof
opening
of
the
original
Cuneo
Hospital
building
are
unusual,
yet
of
their
time.
The
distinctive
human-scaled
geometrical
brutalist
Cuneo
Long-Term
Care
and
Rehabilitation
Facilities
building
offers
creative
site
orientation,
extensive
indoor-outdoor
circulation
at
roof
and
ground
levels,
a
triangular
roof
opening,
and
a
spaceship-like
chapel
that
appears
to
hover
above
the
earth.
The
daylit
skybridge
that
spans
Clarendon
Avenue
is
a
unique
feature
later
adopted
by
other
architects
to
join
campuses
at
two
nearby
Uptown
locations:
across
Eastwood
Avenue
at
Uplift
High
School
(former
Arai
Middle
School)
and
across
Clarendon
Avenue
at
Weiss
Hospital,
where
the
skybridge
just
south
of
Leland
forms
a
transparent
northern
counterpoint
to
the
Cuneo
skybridge
on
the
southern
edge
of
the
historic
Lakeside
community
in
Uptown.
The
building
must
have
a
significant
historic,
community,
architectural
or
aesthetic
interest
or
value,
the
integrity13
of
which
is
preserved
in
light
of
its
location,
design,
setting,
materials,
workmanship,
and
ability
to
express
such
historic,
community,
architectural,
or
aesthetic
interest
or
value:
Cuneo
Hospital
campus
in
its
entirety
embodies
two
decades
of
cutting-edge
mid-century
healthcare
facility
design
by
a
Chicago-area
family
firm
committed
to
a
high-standard
of
community-oriented
architecture
for
over
seventy
years.
Created
through
the
combined
efforts
of
its
patrons,
operating
staff,
architect,
and
builders,
the
structures
today
retain
all
important
features
of
their
original
design
and
unaltered
correspondences
with
their
historic
location.
The
coordinated
architectural
language
of
the
buildings
and
the
connecting
skybridge
remain
whole.
Publicly
available
city
records
indicate
continued
sound
structural
condition.
In
addition,
Cuneo
Hospitals
unique
setting
on
architecturally
rich
Clarendon
Avenue
at
the
geographical
midpoint
of
lakefront
Uptown
holds
out
the
possibility
of
a
creative
adaptive
reuse
that
would
contribute
to
the
wider
recognition
and
purposeful
renewal
of
the
historical
unity
of
Uptown
and
its
lakefront.
Designating
Cuneo
Hospital
as
a
Chicago
landmark
will
protect
and
advance
the
future
integrity
of
Uptowns
significant
architectural
inheritance
and
its
lakefront
legacya
fitting
expression
of
present-day
sustainable
Chicago
in
a
neighborhood
that
today
unites
residents
of
diverse
heritage
in
the
creation
of
a
unique
common
history.
Contemporary
and
h istorical
images
related
to
Cuneo
Hospital
campus
may
be
seen
online:
Friends
of
Cuneo
Flickr
http://www.flickr.com/photos/98922841@N05/
Friends
of
Cuneo
Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/FriendsOfCuneo
13
Merriam-Webster Unabridged, http://unabridged.merriam-webster.com/unabridged/integrity s. v. integrity: Integrity 1 a : an unimpaired or unmarred condition : entire correspondence with an original condition : soundness; b : a n uncompromising adherence to a code of moral, artistic, or other values : utter sincerity, honesty, and candor : avoidance o f deception, expediency, artificiality, or shallowness o f a ny k ind 2 : the quality or state of being complete or undivided : material, spiritual, or aesthetic wholeness : organic unity : entireness, completeness
Cuneo H ospital + C uneo L ong-Term Care & R ehabilitation Facilities, Historical images
This photo dated October 3, 1957, photographer unknown, depicts the blessing of Cuneo Hospitals cornerstone by Cardinal Samuel Stritch. Pictured to the right of Cardinal Stritch in the front row are Mr. & Mrs. John F. Cuneo, Mayor Richard J. Daley, Dr. Karl Meyer, and Mother Onorina, superintendent of Cuneo Memorial Hospital.
Cuneo Hospital (1957), west faade, photographer unknown (perhaps from Hedrich Blessing, courtesy Belli & Belli)
Cuneo Hospital (1957), daylit skybridge, photographer unknown (perhaps Hedrich Blessing, courtesy Belli & Belli)
Cuneo Hospital (1957), patient room, photographer unknown (perhaps Hedrich Blessing, courtesy Belli & Belli)
Cuneo Hospital (1957), round operating room, photographer unknown (perhaps Hedrich Blessing, courtesy Belli & Belli)
Print advertisement for RomanySpartan Ceramic Tile in Architectural Record, October 1960
The caption for this color photo of one of Cuneo Hospital's circular surgical rooms reads: Operating room walls are of RomanySpartan glazed tile, each individually designed and color styled. Plate No. 1093 Frank Cuneo Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Ill. Architects: Belli & Belli Co., Inc., Chicago, Ill. Tile Contracter: McWayne Company, Chicago, Ill.
Cuneo Hospital (1957) linked v ia skybridge (1957) to original six-flat convent for the M issionary Sisters o f the Sacred Heart, pictured in January 1972 (photographer unknown, courtesy Belli & Belli)
Cuneo Hospital (1957), the skybridge (1957), a nd the original six-flat early twentieth-c entury building that served a s convent for the M issionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, January, 1972 (photographer unknown, courtesy Belli & Belli) Surrounding buildings include the C larendon Beach beach house (today Clarendon Park field house) prior to removal of its towers, Lake View Pumping Station (right, demolished in 197879, having c eased pumping in May 1965), the 3 -story a partment buildings replaced in 1974 by Stanley Tigerman's Boardwalk (today known a s 4343 Clarendon), Weiss Hospital (1952), the Clarendon-Windsor (1920, today known a s the Legacy HB), a nd Lakeview Towers, which had been completed in 1970. Photo was taken from the former Monterey Hotel building (808 W. J unior Terrace). The buildings o f which o nly rooftops are v isible in the left foreground also still exist today.
This Metro News Photo, April 1958 (photographer unknown), highlights one of the o ngoing fundraising efforts for Cuneo Hospital over many years, the C uneo Hospital Auxiliary benefit. A description on the back of the photograph reads: For the Lucky Person United Air Lines stewardess Marilyn Austin is try- ing to make the 7 lb. poodle happy. The dog will be awarded at the xxxxx Annual Cuneo M emorial Hospital Auxiliary benefit at the Cameo Room. The pet is worth $1000.00.
Detail of a photo from the Historic American Engineering Record in the Library o f Congress collection (photographer unknown) shows C uneo Hospital a longside Lake View Pumping Station prior to its demolition. Crane & empty corner in background along with snow suggest that work for the Long-Term Care a nd Rehabilitation Facilities (begun in late 1975 and completed in late 1976) was underway. The entire photo below, source: Library of C ongress Prints a nd Photographs D ivision Washington, D .C. 20540 USA, http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/il0420.photos.060768p/.
Rendering for C uneo Hospital Long-Term Care a nd Rehabilitation Facilities, ca. 1975
Cuneo Hospital Long-Term Care a nd Rehabilitation Facilities, southeast corner with c hapel, ca. 1976 (photographer unknown, courtesy Belli & Belli)
Cuneo Hospital (1957) a nd C uneo Long-Term Care a nd Rehabilitation Facilities (197576), v iewed from roofdeck o f the Boardwalk garage, late 1970s (photographer unknown, courtesy Belli & Belli)
Note: Per B elli & Belli (May 2013), the floor plans for Cuneo L ong-Term Care a nd Rehabilitation Facilities may not be reproduced.