| An original 98,000-square foot Kaiser Permanente Field Hospital built to serve shipyard workers on Cutting Blvd. There is interest in maintaining this structure to help interpret the development of Kaiser Permanente health care during World War II.
Originally intended for use primarily as an emergency facility, the Field Hospital opened with only ten beds. Later additions increased its capacity to 160 beds by 1944. The Field Hospital operated as a Kaiser Permanente hospital until closing in 1995.

The Richmond Field Hospital faces north onto Cutting Boulevard, a busy and important thoroughfare that creates an east west axis through the City of Richmond. The site is located in a neighborhood bordered by light industry to the south, east and west, with a largely residential neighborhood to the north. Although the Richmond Field Hospital is located within blocks of the associated shipyards along the bay shoreline, the hospital setting is primarily defined by the more immediate surrounding residential enclaves, light industry, and commercial businesses. A more industrial aesthetic/feeling may have existed within the hospital grounds when many of the structures associated with the institution were extant.
Much
smaller than the Permanente Foundation
hospital, the Field Hospital, the middle
component of the three tiered shipyard
medical program, was located blocks away
from Shipyards One and Two, at the intersection
of Cutting Boulevard and Fourteenth Street
(now Marina Way) in Richmond. The USMC
built this hospital, like the first aid
clinics. The USMC owned the property and
financed the field hospital for $60,000.
Modern architecture, with simple lines and relative lack of decoration, was particularly well suited to building with limited materials, as necessitated by the war. Materials such as steel, copper, iron, and others were needed for the manufacture of arms and weapons. The architect of the Field Hospital is not known for certain, but it is likely to have been Ed Cerruti, a local architect who worked for Kaiser.
The exterior of the Richmond Field Hospital retains a fair degree of integrity according to the seven aspects of integrity defined by National Register Bulletin 36: location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association. The building remains in its original historic location. The building’s original modernist design with Streamline
elements
remain intact. The current setting within
proximity to the shipyards has not changed
although many of the various buildings
and structures associated with the shipyards
are no longer extant. The historic materials
originally employed on the exterior portions
of the building are extant. The workmanship
of the building is still evident in the
exterior, and the feeling or historic sense
of the hospital building is articulated
through its form and modern details. The
building is currently vacant and does not
retain its original function.
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