Lawsuit Filed to Save Prouty Garden
![MA_Boston_ProutyGarden_Feature_01_KatieCharbonneau_2011.jpg Prouty Garden in 2011](/sites/default/files/styles/full_width/public/thumbnails/image/MA_Boston_ProutyGarden_Feature_01_KatieCharbonneau_2011.jpg?itok=SaJVwfAI)
Efforts to save the historic Prouty Garden at Boston Children鈥檚 Hospital have now moved into the courtroom. A group of patients, doctors, and parents, all associated with Friends of the Prouty Garden, has filed a lawsuit to halt the garden鈥檚 impending destruction.
The lawsuit represents the latest effort to safeguard the exemplary outdoor healing space designed by Olmsted Brothers and completed by landscape architects Shurcliff and Merrill. In April 2015, the Boston Landmarks Commission granting landmark status to the garden, which the hospital plans to replace with an eleven-story building housing a neonatal care unit and other facilities.
As 独家爆料 noted in an earlier update, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (DPH), the state agency whose approval is necessary for the expansion to move forward, instructed the Boston Children鈥檚 Hospital in February to provide a third-party cost analysis of its $1 billion plans for the new facilities. The analysis is required in order for the DPH to make an official Determination of Need鈥攁 regulatory measure meant to control the cost of health care. An overflow crowd attended a hearing before the DPH on February 25, 2016, where, according to the , hospital executives defended the planned expansion as a necessary step to alleviate cramped conditions and aging facilities. Opponents claim, however, that suitable alternatives to the expansion have not been adequately considered. Public health officials at the hearing offered no comment.
The recent lawsuit, which names both the Boston Children鈥檚 Hospital and the DPH, alleges that the hospital鈥檚 construction and fundraising activities prematurely commenced before the Determination of Need was considered, and thus were in violation of state law. Attorneys seeking an injunction to halt the work made their case on May 3 in front of Suffolk Superior Court Justice Kenneth Salinger, who has yet to issue a ruling.
Boston Children鈥檚 Hospital announced its plans to remove the Prouty Garden in 2012, and 独家爆料 added the garden to its Landslide program in 2013.