
Fort Greene Park garden honors
healthcare workers lost to pandemic
BY BEN VERDE
A newly planted garden in
Fort Greene Park honors the
frontline workers of Brooklyn
Hospital who lost their lives
during New York City’s fi rst
coronavirus surge.
The garden, planted
through a partnership with
the nearby hospital, the Fort
Greene Park Conservancy,
and the Parks Department,
features six freshly planted
limber pine trees meant to
represent each of the hospital
workers who died during the
pandemic’s fi rst wave. Outside
the new garden sits a bench
with the names of the healthcare
heroes engraved on a
plaque.
“We wanted this memorial
to be in Fort Greene Park,
which is our next-door neighbor
and which shares the
same provenance as our hospital,”
said Brooklyn Hospital
Center President Gary Terrinoni.
COURIER L 14 IFE, NOV. 20-26, 2020
“When I visit this bench,
I am reminded of the bond between
the hospital and our
incredible community, who
held all healthcare workers in
their hearts and lifted us up
throughout this ordeal.”
The trees honoring Nanette
Ham, Kelvin Taylor, David
Wolin, Ed Becote, Rafael
Cargill, and Louis Fontaine
are planted near the southwest
entrance to the park on
Dekalb Avenue, overlooking
the hospital grounds, and are
expected to grow to be over 50
feet tall in maturity among
other pines that have been
there since the 1800s.
Brooklyn Hospital Center
has been on the front lines of
the coronavirus pandemic
since it reached the city in late
spring, and was one of the fi rst
medical centers to implement a
pre-screening unit outside the
hospital to assess patients for
possibly COVID symptoms.
The new garden and bench inside Fort Greene Park pays tribute to Brooklyn Hospital workers lost to the coronavirus
pandemic. The Brooklyn Hospital Center
Across the country, more
than 1,700 healthcare workers
are estimated to have died
from the coronavirus. More
than half a year since the outbreak
of the virus in New York
City, the country is headed towards
what experts predict
could be the “darkest days” of
the pandemic, as the Five Boroughs
stare down a “dangerously
close” second wave.
As they forge ahead, Terrinoni
said, the staff at Brooklyn
Hospital will continue to
honor those they’ve lost.
“We move forward with
tears and memories, but also
with a clearer sense of purpose
and hope, while never
forgetting those we lost,” he
said.
Additional reporting by
Kevin Duggan
Health